List of enclaves and exclaves

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In political geography, an enclave is a piece of land belonging to one country (or region etc.) that is totally surrounded by another country (or region). An exclave is a piece of land that is politically attached to a larger piece but not physically contiguous with it (connected to it) because they are completely separated by a surrounding foreign territory or territories. Many entities are both enclaves and exclaves.

Enclaves that are also exclaves

Each enclave listed in this section has an administrative level equivalent to that of the one other entity that entirely surrounds it. Each enclave is also a part of a main region; hence, it is an exclave of that region.

National level

Name[1][2] Area (km2) Exclave of Enclaved within Coordinates Notes
Apipé Islands[3] (4) Template:Hs~320 Template:Country data Argentina (Corrientes ProvinceItuzaingó Department) Template:Country data Paraguay (Misiones Department – Ayolas District) Template:Coord Four adjacent islands (Isla Apipé Grande, Isla Apipé Chico, Isla Los Patos and Isla San Martín) with territorial water borders in the Río Paraná, 39 km east of Isla Entre Rios. Island areas are about 276, 23.8, 11.8 and 3.7 km2, respectively.
Isla Entre Ríos[3] Template:Hs~36 Template:Country data Argentina (Corrientes ProvinceBerón de Astrada Department) Template:Country data Paraguay (Ñeembucú Department – Cerrito District) Template:Coord Uninhabited island with territorial water border in the Río Paraná, 39 km west of Isla Apipé.
Isla Martín García 1.84 Template:Country data Argentina (Buenos Aires ProvinceLa Plata Partido) Template:Country data Uruguay Template:Coord Territorial water border on the Uruguay side of Río de la Plata. Designated as a nature reserve under the jurisdiction of Argentina in 1973.
Artsvashen Template:Hs~40 Template:Country data Armenia (Gegharkunik Province) Template:Country data Azerbaijan Template:Coord Controlled by Azerbaijan since the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in 1992.
Torres Strait Islands (7) Template:Hs~2,200 (including water area) Template:Country data Australia (QueenslandShire of Torres and Torres Strait Island Region) Template:Country data Papua New Guinea Template:Coord The islands of Anchor Cay, Aubusi Island, Black Rocks, Boigu Island (89.6 km2), Bramble Cay (0.036 km2), Dauan Island (4 km2), Deliverance Island, East Cay, Kaumag Island, Kerr Islet, Moimi Island, Saibai Island (107.9 km2), Turnagain Island (12 km2) and Turu Cay, along with their territorial seas, form seven enclaves within the maritime area of Papua New Guinea under a treaty effective in 1985. The territorial sea of each island does not extend beyond three nautical miles.[4][5] The mainland of Papua New Guinea is only 6 km from Boigu.
Jungholz 7.05 Template:Country data Austria (Tyrol state – Reutte District) Template:Country data Germany (Bavaria state – Swabia administrative region) Template:Coord Connected at a quadripoint at the summit of the mountain Sorgschrofen (1636 m); accessible only through Germany. Vinokurov (2007) states, "For all purposes, a connection in a single point does not mean anything. It is just like being completely separated. One cannot pass through a single point, nor is it possible to transport goods. It is not even possible to lay a telephone line."[3]
Barkhudarli Template:Hs~10 Template:Country data Azerbaijan (Qazakh District) Template:Country data Armenia (Tavush Province) Template:Coord Controlled by Armenia since the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in May 1992; west-southwest of the town of Qazax.
Yukhari Askipara Template:Hs~28 Template:Coord A destroyed village controlled by Armenia since the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in May 1992; west of the town of Qazax.
Karki / Tigranashen 8 Template:Country data Azerbaijan (Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, Sadarak District) Template:Country data Armenia (Ararat Province) Template:Coord Controlled by Armenia since the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in May 1992; north of Azerbaijan's exclave of Nakhchivan.
Yaradullu (north and south) Template:Hs0.12 and 0.06 Template:Country data Azerbaijan (Ağstafa District) Template:Country data Armenia (Tavush Province) Template:Coord Two farmland enclaves just across the border from the village of Yaradullu[6][7] (55 m at the closest point). They are 750 m and 1500 m southwest of the municipality of Tatlı on the west bank of the Akhum River; approximately 300x400 m and 300x200 m. The surrounding Armenian territory has been occupied by Azerbaijan since the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in May 1992, so that these two small pockets of land are de facto no longer exclaves.
Dahagram-Angarpota 25.95 Template:Country data Bangladesh (Rangpur DivisionLalmonirhat district) Template:Country data India (West Bengal state – Cooch Behar district) Template:Coord Dahagram–Angarpota is a composite enclave of two adjoining chhits. It is separated from the contiguous area of Bangladesh at its closest point by Template:Convert. The enclave has an estimated population of 20,000. After the exchange of enclaves with India under the Land Boundary Agreement on 31 July 2015, Bangladesh retained it as an exclave. The Tin Bigha Corridor, a strip of Indian territory Template:Convert wide running from the enclave to the Bangladesh mainland at its nearest approach, was leased to Bangladesh for 999 years for access to the enclave.[1][8][9]
Baarle-Hertog (22 parcels) 2.3448 Template:Country data Belgium (Antwerp province – Baarle-Hertog municipality) Template:Country data Netherlands (North Brabant province – Baarle-Nassau municipality) Template:Coord (H1) A group of 22 Belgian enclaves in the southern Netherlands. Enclaves H1 and H2 are connected at a single point.
Međurečje 3.9584 Template:Country data Bosnia and Herzegovina (Republika SrpskaRudo municipality) Template:Country data Serbia (Zlatibor DistrictPriboj municipality) Template:Coord Homeland of Bosnia-Herzegovina is Template:Convert to the north. Sastavci is the name of the neighbouring village in Serbia.
West Kowloon Port (aka. Mainland Port Area) 0.11 Template:Country data China (Guangdong province – Futian district) Template:Country data Hong Kong (Yau Tsim Mong district) Template:Coord China's immigration/customs border crossing that is located within Hong Kong; compartments of operating passenger trains on the rail link in Hong Kong are also considered part of Mainland Port Area.[10] It is not contiguous with the rest of China. Effectively ceded to China in 2018 for a token HK$1,000 per year.
Quitasueño 3,577, including water area[11] Template:Country data Colombia (San Andrés y Providencia Department) Template:Country data Nicaragua Template:Coord[12] (QS32)[11] On 19 November 2012, the International Court of Justice upheld Colombia's claim to Quitasueño, plus a 12-NM territorial zone, and re-defined Nicaragua's exclusive economic zone (EEZ), thus surrounding the island bank.[13] It deemed one of the bank's 54 features to be an island at high tide (elevation 70 cm, area 1 m2)[14] and created enclaves as an equitable solution.[15] The area of the bank, excluding the 12-mile zone, is ~290 km2.[16]
Serrana Template:Hs~2,800, including water area Template:Coord (Southwest Cay) On 19 November 2012, ICJ upheld Colombia's claim to Serrana, plus a 12-NM territorial zone, and re-defined Nicaragua's EEZ, surrounding the island bank.[13] The land area is ~0.11 km2, and the area of the bank, excluding the 12-mile zone, is ~322 km2.[16] Colombia decried the loss of maritime areas and creation of "'enclaves' around Quitasueño and Serrana that could restrict" access.[13]
Brezovica Žumberačka (2) 0.0183+ Template:Country data Croatia (Karlovac CountyOzalj town) Template:Country data Slovenia (Metlika municipality) Template:Coord The first enclave contains four dwellings surrounded by agricultural land near the Slovenian village of Brezovica pri Metliki. It is about 437 m long and 60 m wide covering 1.83 ha. Confirmed by both Croatian and Slovenian cadaster maps, it lies about 100 metres away from the main border at the closest point.[6][7][17][18]

A second enclave lies within 300 metres of the first. It was created on 29 June 2017 when the Permanent Court of Arbitration decided that a disputed 2.4 ha parcel is part of Slovenia and that the border follows Slovenian cadastral limits, thus completing the encirclement of the second Croatian enclave.[19][20] Croatia has stated that it will ignore the arbitration decision.[21]

Ormidhia 1.694 Template:Country data Cyprus (Larnaca District) Template:Country data Akrotiri and Dhekelia Sovereign Base Area Template:Coord Small exclave surrounded by Dhekelia, a British Overseas Territory in southeastern Cyprus. The degree of sovereignty and legitimacy of the Sovereign Base Areas is disputed by the Republic of Cyprus.[22][23]
Xylotymbou 0.947 Template:Coord Small exclave surrounded by Dhekelia, a British Overseas Territory.
"Electricity Authority of Cyprus" Refugee Settlement Template:Hs~0.28 Template:Coord North of Dhekelia Power Station from which it is separated by a British road; the closest point between the two territories is 21 metres.
Dhekelia Power Station Template:Hs~0.161 Template:Coord Partially borders the coast but enclosed by UK land and waters disputed between Cyprus and the UK; the power station is owned by the Electricity Authority of Cyprus (EAC); no permanent population.
Münsterbildchen 1.826 Template:Country data Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Roetgen municipality) Template:Country data Belgium (Liège province – Raeren municipality) Template:Coord West of Vennbahn trackbed; northernmost German enclave, mainly home to industrial and warehouse structures.
Template:Ill 9.98 Template:Country data Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Roetgen and Simmerath municipalities) Template:Country data Belgium (Liège province) Template:Coord Western part of Template:Ill, southern part of Roetgen, and intervening forest (Forst Rötgen); west and south of Vennbahn trackbed. From 1922 to 1958, the center portion (between Grenzweg and a boundary with three turning points west of the Schleebach stream) was Belgian territory. Until 1949, the east–west road that connected the two outer (German) portions was also German territory; therefore, the German land formed one oddly-shaped enclave (that also included the road to Konzen). In 1949, it was split into two enclaves when Germany ceded the roads to Belgium;[24] in 1958, Belgium returned the east–west road and also ceded the centre section of the current enclave to Germany.
Rückschlag 0.016 Template:Country data Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia state – Aachen district – Monschau town) Template:Country data Belgium (Liège province – Eupen municipality) Template:Coord Part of city of Monschau, west of Vennbahn trackbed; smallest German exclave, consisting of a house and a garden.
Mützenich 12.117 Template:Country data Belgium (Liège province) Template:Coord West of Belgium's Vennbahn trackbed.
Template:Ill 0.937 Template:Coord Part of city of Monschau, west of Vennbahn trackbed; southernmost Vennbahn enclave after 1949 (when Belgium annexed the Template:Ill enclave).
Büsingen am Hochrhein 7.62 Template:Country data Germany (Baden-Württemberg state – Konstanz district) Template:Country data Switzerland Template:Coord At its closest, less than Template:Convert from Germany proper (to the east). Part of Swiss customs
Campione d'Italia 1.6 Template:Country data Italy (Lombardy region – Province of Como) Template:Country data Switzerland (Canton TicinoLugano District) Template:Coord Uses the Swiss franc, Former part of Swiss customs (until 2020). Separated by less than 1 km, at the shortest distance, from the rest of Italy by Lake Lugano and mountains, but the terrain requires a 14 km road journey to reach the nearest Italian town, Lanzo d'Intelvi.
Likoma Island 130.0 (incl a territorial water area) Template:Country data Malawi (Northern RegionLikoma District) Template:Country data Mozambique (Niassa ProvinceLago District) Template:Coord Lacustrine enclave, including smaller islets, with territorial water border in Lake Malawi (Lake Nyasa); only ~5 kilometres from the Mozambique shore; combined land area of Likoma Is. and the smaller Chizumulu Is. is 18 km2.
Chizumulu Island (incl Lundu Is., Papia Is., Ngkyvo Is.) 101.4 (incl 2-NM territorial water area) Template:Coord Lacustrine enclave with territorial water border in Lake Malawi (Lake Nyasa); Malawian mainland is 46 km away.
Baarle-Nassau (8 parcels) 0.150684 Template:Country data Netherlands (North Brabant province – Baarle-Nassau municipality) Template:Country data Belgium (Antwerp province – Baarle-Hertog municipality) Template:Coord (N8) Seven of the eight Dutch enclaves are counter-enclaves inside two Belgian enclaves (H1 and H8); one is in the main body of Belgium (N8).
Template:Ill (and beach) Template:Hs~0.46 Template:Country data Nicaragua (Río San Juan Department) Template:Country data Costa Rica (Limón Province) Template:Coord On 2 Feb 2018, the ICJ rendered a decision in a border dispute between Nicaragua and Costa Rica regarding Template:Ill. Nicaragua was left with just the Laguna Los Portillos and its short strip of beach. The court also decided that the sea just outside of the lagoon would be Costa Rican waters. The ICJ concluded that the whole beach is Costa Rican except for the part directly between the lagoon and the Caribbean Sea – now a tiny enclave of Nicaraguan territory separated from the rest of the country.[25]
Madha Template:Hs~75 Template:Country data Oman (Musandam Governorate) Template:Country data United Arab Emirates Template:Coord Halfway between the Omani fragment on the Musandam Peninsula and the rest of Oman; surrounds the UAE counter-enclave of Nahwa.
San'kovo-Medvezh'e 4.54 Template:Country data Russia (Bryansk OblastZlynkovsky District) Template:Country data Belarus (Gomel RegionDobrush Raion) Template:Coord Contains two small villages that have been depopulated since the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine.
Llívia 12.84 Template:Country data Spain (Catalonia autonomous community – Province of Girona/Cerdanya comarca) Template:Country data France (Occitania region – Pyrénées-Orientales department) Template:Coord To the east of Andorra, separated from the rest of Spain by a corridor about 2 km wide containing the French communes of Ur and Bourg-Madame.
Vorukh Template:Hs~96.7 Template:Country data Tajikistan (Sughd ProvinceIsfara District) Template:Country data Kyrgyzstan (Batken ProvinceBatken District) Template:Coord South of the mountain Ak-Tash; population is 95% Tajik and the rest Kyrgyz.
"Lolazor" Template:Hs~0.88 Template:Country data Kyrgyzstan (Batken ProvinceLeilek District) Template:Coord Near the railway station of Stantsiya Kayragach, next to the Kyrgyz–Tajik border; also referred to as "Western Qal'acha" due to proximity to the Tajik town of Qal'acha; apparently there is no named settlement.
Sarvan (also Sarvaksoi, Sarvaki-bolo) 8.4 Template:Country data Tajikistan (Sughd RegionAsht District) Template:Country data Uzbekistan (Namangan Region – Pop district) Template:Coord Long, narrow territory located in the Fergana and Isfara valleys region where Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan meet.
Nahwa Template:Hs~5.2 Template:Country data United Arab Emirates (Sharjah emirate) Template:Country data Oman (Musandam Governorate) Template:Coord A counter-enclave surrounded by Madha, reported to consist of around forty houses.[26]
Template:Ill (5 islands) Template:Hs~23 Template:Country data Uruguay (Río Negro Department) Template:Country data Argentina (Entre Ríos ProvinceGualeguaychú and Uruguay departments) Template:Coord Five adjacent islands (Isla Filomena Grande, Isla Filomena Chica, Isla Palma Chica, Isla Bassi, Isla Tres Cruces) with territorial water borders in the Uruguay River. Uninhabited islands that form part of the Esteros de Farrapos National Park.
Sokh Template:Hs~234 Template:Country data Uzbekistan (Fergana Region – Sokh district) Template:Country data Kyrgyzstan (Batken Region) Template:Coord Large enclave with 99% Tajik population, the rest Kyrgyz and almost no ethnic Uzbeks.
Chon-Qora or Qalacha (the 2 Uzbek villages in the enclave) Template:Hs~3 Template:Coord Tiny enclave lying on the Sokh River, immediately north of Sokh; measures about 3 km long by 1 km wide, with the Uzbek villages of Chon-Qora (or Chongara Template:Coord) and Qalacha (Template:Coord) at either end; the Kyrgyz village of Chong-Kara (or Chon-Kara Template:Coord) lies 2 km northwest.[6][7][27] [Note: The Kyrgyz Cyrillic alphabet contains three characters not present in the Uzbek alphabet. One of these characters is romanised from Kyrgyz as the digraph ng, which is not present in romanised Uzbek words.][28]
Jani-Ayil (also Jangy-ayyl or Khalmion) Template:Hs~0.8 Template:Country data Uzbekistan (Fergana Region – Fergana district) Template:Country data Kyrgyzstan (Batken RegionKadamjay District) Template:Coord Tiny enclave north-northwest of the Shakhimardan enclave; within 1 km of the Uzbek main border; the Kyrgyz towns of Jangy-Ayyl (Template:Coord) and Khalmion (Template:Coord) lie outside opposite edges of this enclave.[6][7][27]
Shakhimardan Template:Hs~38.2 Template:Coord Located in a narrow valley in the Alay Mountains where the rivers Ok-su and Kok-su meet to form the Shakhimardan-sai.[6][7][27]
High Seas Template:Hs~180,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Country data Japan Template:Coord Surrounded by Japan's EEZ; it lies between the territorial zones of Honshu, Shikoku, the Bonin Islands, Okino-tori-shima and Okinawa Island
High Seas Template:Hs~1,300 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Country data New Zealand Template:Coord Surrounded by New Zealand's EEZ; it lies between the territorial zones of the Chatham Islands, North Island and the Bounty Islands
High Seas Template:Hs~14,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Country data New Zealand Template:Coord Surrounded by New Zealand's EEZ; it lies between the territorial zones of Campbell Island, South Island and the Antipodes Islands
High Seas Template:Hs~3,700 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Country data French Polynesia Template:Coord Surrounded by France's EEZ; it lies between the territorial zones of the Bass Islands, Raivavae, Nukutepipi, and Tematagi
Peanut Hole,
High Seas[29]
Template:Hs~46,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Country data Russia Template:Coord Surrounded by Russia's EEZ in the Sea of Okhotsk, lying between the territorial zones of the Kamchatka Peninsula, Kuril Islands and Sakhalin Island. In March 2014, the area became a part of Russia's continental shelf.[30] (Note: EEZs are not areas of sovereignty, but rather of sovereign rights and functional jurisdiction.)

First-order subnational level

Name Area (km2) Parent Country Exclave of Enclaved within Coordinates Notes
Qobu Template:Hs~87 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Absheron Rayon Baku Template:Coord Map showing Absheron rayon and Qobu; another showing Çeyildağ also
(south of Şərədil) Template:Hs~9.7 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Agsu District Shamakhi District Template:Coord
Çeyildağ[31] Template:Hs~21 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Baku Absheron Rayon Template:Coord Template:GEOnet2
• Divanalılar and • Yuxarı Veysəlli[32][33][34] Template:Hs~1.3 and ~4.3 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Füzuli Rayon Xocavənd Rayon Template:Coord, Template:Coord (Template:GEOnet2)
Yuxarı Məzrə Template:Hs~3.1 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Jabrayil District Khojavend District Template:Coord
• Yeni Qaralar and • (near Muğanlı) Template:Hs~0.25 and ~1.7 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Khojaly District Aghdam District Template:Coord,
Template:Coord
Ağbaş Template:Hs~17 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Shabran District Siyazan District Template:Coord
de jure
• (includes Aşağı Quşçular, Yuxarı Quşçular, Malıbəyli)[34][35] and • (southeast of Khojaly)
Template:Hs~9.3 and ~3.6 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Şuşa Rayon Xocalı Rayon Template:Coord,
Template:Coord
Located near Xankəndi (Stepanakert), which includes parts of Şuşa and Xocalı Rayons. (Template:GEOnet2, Template:GEOnet2, Template:GEOnet2)
• (northeast of Deşdahat, north of Başarat)[34][36] Template:Hs~5.3 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Xocavənd Rayon Qubadlı Rayon Template:Coord Map showing exclave.
• (main part of the city)
• Minsk National Airport
• Template:Ill
409.5 Template:Country data Belarus Minsk Minsk Region (Minsk and Smalyavichy Raions) Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord
• (1 parcel) Template:Hs~0.11 Template:Country data Belarus Minsk Region (Minsk Raion) Minsk (Maskowski District) Template:Coord
(south of Arjo village) Template:Hs~17 Template:Country data Ethiopia Benishangul-Gumuz Region (Kamashi ZoneBelo Jegonfoy) Oromia Region Template:Coord
(northeast of Uke) (2 parcels) Template:Country data Ethiopia Oromia Region (East Welega ZoneGuto Gida district) Template:Coord, Template:Coord
• (includes Gardères, Luquet) and • (includes Séron, Escaunets, Villenave-près-Béarn) 42.02 Template:Country data France Occitania (Hautes-PyrénéesArrondissement of TarbesCanton of Ossun and Canton of Vic-en-Bigorre) Nouvelle-Aquitaine (Pyrénées-AtlantiquesArrondissement of Pau) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Séron is less than 300 metres from the neighbouring enclave to its south that includes Gardères and Luquet; they, along with Séron, are part of Canton d'Ossun. Escaunets and Villenave-près-Béarn are in the same enclave with Séron, but unlike Séron, they are part of Canton de Vic-en-Bigorre.
Canton of Valréas 124.91 Template:Country data France Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur (VaucluseArrondissement of Avignon) Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (DrômeArrondissement of Nyons) Template:Coord Known as the Enclave des Papes, it was part of the possessions of the Pope in France near Avignon;[37] it was attached to Vaucluse when annexed after the départements were created (see Comtat Venaissin).
(2 parcels) Template:Hs~0.043 Template:Country data Germany Baden-Württemberg (KarlsruheRhein-Neckar-KreisLaudenbach) Hesse (DarmstadtBergstraßeHeppenheim) Template:Coord
Template:Coord
One of these is a counter enclave.
• Hansestadt Bremen (south) and • Hansestadt Bremen (north) 408 Template:Country data Germany Freie Hansestadt Bremen Lower Saxony Template:Coord Template:Coord Bremerhaven and Überseehafengebiet comprise Bremen's northern part, which is 60 km downstream of Bremen's larger southern part on the River Weser. Both parts of Hansestadt Bremen are enclaves within Lower Saxony, as well as exclaves of each other.
Fehrmoor (part) Template:Hs~0.57 Template:Country data Germany Freie Hansestadt Bremen (Bremerhaven Stadt – Nord StadtbezirkTemplate:Ill Stadtteil – Fehrmoor Ortsteil) Lower Saxony (Cuxhaven) Template:Coord Fehrmoor is a part of Leherheide, which is a sub-division of Bremerhaven. Part of Fehrmoor is separated by a narrow strip of Lower Saxony from the rest of Bremerhaven, making it an exclave of the city and of the state.
Ober-Laudenbach (part) Template:Hs~0.58 Template:Country data Germany Hesse (DarmstadtBergstraßeHeppenheim) Baden-Württemberg (KarlsruheRhein-Neckar-KreisLaudenbach) Template:Coord Contains a counter enclave.
Choto Pokalagi 0.549 Template:Country data India Assam (Dhubri district) West Bengal (Cooch Behar district) Template:Coord A national level enclave prior to the incorporation of Cooch Behar into India in 1949
Gobrarkuthi 0.149 Template:Country data India Template:Coord A national level enclave prior to the incorporation of Cooch Behar into India in 1949
Ramrayerkuthi 0.084 Template:Country data India Template:Coord A national level enclave prior to the incorporation of Cooch Behar into India in 1949
Dadra Template:Hs~26 Template:Country data India Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu (Dadra and Nagar Haveli district) Gujarat (Valsad district) Template:Coord Dadra was part of the former Portuguese India.
Maghval[38][39] Template:Country data India Gujarat (Valsad districtKaparada Taluka) Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu (Dadra and Nagar Haveli district – Nagar Haveli taluka) Template:Coord Formerly "Bombay Enclave," Maghval was a British counter-enclave within the Portuguese enclave within British India until independence.
Yanam district 20 Template:Country data India Puducherry Andhra Pradesh (East Godavari district) Template:Coord The four districts of Puducherry (Pondicherry, Mahe, Yanam and Karaikal) constituted a French colony until 1954.
• Cherukallayi and • (includes Palloor, Chalakkara, Pandakkal) Template:Country data India Puducherry (Mahe district) Kerala (Kannur district) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Mahe district consists of these two true enclaves and Mahé municipality.
• Bahour PS-Karaiyambuthur OP (3 enclaves), • Dhanvantry Nagar PS-Alankuppam OP, • Thirubuvanai PS/Thirukkanur PS (part), • Kattery Kuppam PS/Thirukkanur PS (part), • Nettapakkam PS (west), • Mangalam PS (part), • Thirukkanur PS (part)[40] Template:Country data India Puducherry (Pondicherry district) Tamil Nadu (Cuddalore and Viluppuram districts) Template:Coord (the largest part) These 9 parcels along with three coastal pene-exclaves comprise all of Pondicherry district.
Kilinjikuppam and Singirikudi (part) Template:Hs~7.4 Template:Country data India Tamil Nadu (Cuddalore districtCuddalore taluk) Puducherry (Pondicherry district) Template:Coord This enclave is surrounded by one of the three coastal pene-exclaves in Pondicherry district.
Bara Lowkuthi 5.47 Template:Country data India West Bengal (Cooch Behar district) Assam (Kokrajhar district) Template:Coord A national level enclave prior to the incorporation of Cooch Behar into India in 1949
Template:Ill (includes Santa Sofia Marecchia and Ortale) Template:Hs~15 Template:Country data Italy Tuscany (Province of ArezzoBadia Tedalda) Emilia-Romagna (Province of Rimini) Template:Coord One enclave
Template:Ill 2.7 Template:Country data Italy Umbria (Province of PerugiaCittà di Castello) Marche (Province of Pesaro and Urbino) Template:Coord This enclave consists of hills, cropland and few structures.
Lama Superiore and Valle Inferiore Template:Hs ~0.29 and ~0.11 Template:Country data Italy Emilia Romagna (Province of PiacenzaCorte Brugnatella) Lombardy (Province of Pavia) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Two tiny rural enclaves very close to each other. There is just one house in Valle Inferiore and none in Lama.
San Pellegrino in Alpe Template:Country data Italy Emilia Romagna (Province of ModenaFrassinoro) Tuscany (Province of LuccaCastiglione di Garfagnana) Template:Coord Enclave including part of the village of San Pellegrino in Alpe. map
San Pio (1 parcel) Template:Hs~0.18 Template:Country data Italy Lombardy (Province of PaviaPieve del Cairo) Piedmont (Province of Alessandria) Template:Coord The enclave is a small plot of cropland
Iesce Template:Country data Italy Basilicata (Province of MateraMatera) Apulia (Province of BariAltamura) Template:Coord The enclave is a small plot of cropland
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Japan Saitama Prefecture (Fukaya) Gunma Prefecture (Isesaki) Template:Coord
(2 parcels) Template:Country data Japan Tokyo (Machida) Kanagawa Prefecture (Sagamihara) Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Nishiōizumimachi 0.002 Template:Country data Japan Tokyo (Nerima Ward) Saitama Prefecture (Niiza) Template:Coord The enclave is a small street.[41]
Wes Template:Country data Liechtenstein Planken Schaan Template:Coord One of the 4 exclaves of Planken (map)
Brunnenegg Template:Country data Liechtenstein Schaan Planken Template:Coord One of the 4 exclaves of Schaan (map)
Rüttistein Template:Country data Liechtenstein Vaduz Planken Template:Coord One of the 6 exclaves of Vaduz (map)
Forst Template:Country data Liechtenstein Vaduz Schaan Template:Coord One of the 6 exclaves of Vaduz (map)
(2 parcels) Template:Country data Moldova Dubăsari District Transnistrian-controlled Dubăsari District Template:Coord, Template:Coord Transnistria is de facto independent, but not recognised by any member states of the United Nations. Control of two highways (east of Roghi, west of Vasilievca) by Transnistria in this frozen conflict created these two neighbouring enclaves.
Condrița Template:Country data Moldova Chișinău municipality Strășeni District (Scoreni commune) Template:Coord
Template:Ill Template:Country data Moldova Chișinău municipality Criuleni district Template:Coord
Template:Hs~0.24 Template:Country data Moldova Călărași District (Bahmut commune) Ungheni District (Hîrcești commune) Template:Coord
Template:Hs~0.96 Template:Country data Moldova Ocnița District (Unguri commune) Dondușeni District Template:Coord
Template:Hs~0.45 Template:Country data Moldova Călărași District (Vărzăreștii Noi commune) Strășeni District Template:Coord
Template:Hs~2.1 Template:Country data Moldova Orhei District (Peresecina commune) Criuleni District Template:Coord
Central Ulaanbaatar 3944 Template:Country data Mongolia Ulaanbaatar Töv Province Template:Coord Ulaanbaatar is divided into three sections, of which two are enclaves
Bagakhangai 140 Template:Coord
Sambú 1296.4 Template:Country data Panama Comarca Emberá-Wounaan Darién Province (Chepigana District) Template:Coord
El Bale Template:Country data Panama Ngäbe-Buglé Comarca (Ñürüm) Veraguas Province (Cañazas District) Template:Coord
• Cerro Pelado and • (near El Piro) Template:Country data Panama Ngäbe-Buglé Comarca (Müna) Veraguas Province (Las Palmas District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord The unnamed parcel is a crescent-shaped forested area bordered by streams.
• Bakama and • (includes Trinidad) Template:Country data Panama Ngäbe-Buglé Comarca (Müna) Chiriquí Province (Tolé District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord The village of Trinidad appears to be the only population center in the unnamed parcel.
Lomopog Template:Country data Philippines Soccsksargen (CotabatoMidsayap) Bangsamoro Template:Coord A barangay that became enclaved when its neighboring barangays seceded from Midsayap to join Bangsamoro as the new municipalities of Kadayangan and Nabalawag.
Southwestern Pikit Template:Country data Philippines Soccsksargen (CotabatoPikit) Bangsamoro Template:Coord Consists of barangays Damalasak, Katilacan, Kolambog, Paidu Pulangi, Pamalian, Punol, and Silik that became enclaved when their neighboring barangays seceded from Cotabato to join Bangsamoro as the new municipality of Tugunan.
Northeast Kapalawan-Old Kaabakan Template:Country data Philippines Bangsamoro (Special Geographic Area) Soccsksargen (Cotabato) Template:Coord Consists of barangays Buluan, Kitulaan, Langogan, Manarapan, Nanga-an, Pebpoloan, Pedtad, Simbuhay, Simone, and Tamped that seceded from Cotabato to join Bangsamoro. Some of these barangays are now the northeastern part of the new municipality of Kapalawan, while the rest are almost all the barangays of the new municipality of Old Kaabakan.
Sanggadong Template:Country data Philippines Bangsamoro (Special Geographic Area) Soccsksargen (Cotabato) Template:Coord A barangay that seceded from Kabacan, Cotabato to join Bangsamoro. It is now part of the new municipality of Old Kaabakan.
Zelenogradsky Administrative Okrug 37.22 Template:Country data Russia Moscow Moscow Oblast Template:Coord
Vostochny (2 parcels)[42][43][44] 3.20 Template:Country data Russia Moscow (Eastern Administrative OkrugVostochny District) Moscow Oblast (Template:Ill) Template:Coord, Template:Coord These two enclaves within Moscow Oblast are separated only by the width of the road between them.
Template:Ill (2 parcels)[45][46] Template:Hs~0.16 and ~0.024 Template:Country data Russia Moscow (Eastern Administrative OkrugVostochny District) Moscow Oblast Template:Coord, Template:Coord Two small enclaves
Template:Ill Template:Country data Russia Moscow (Troitsky Administrative OkrugTemplate:Ill) Moscow Oblast (Naro-Fominsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord Machikhino became part of "Template:Ill" on 1 July 2012.
Template:Ill (2 parcels) Template:Country data Russia Moscow (Western Administrative OkrugKuntsevo District) Moscow Oblast (Krasnogorsky District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Arkhangelsky became part of "Template:Ill" on 1 July 2012. The smaller parcel has an area of 2.33 km2.
Template:Ill (i.e., "Stud Farm, VTB") 27.18 Template:Country data Russia Moscow (Western Administrative OkrugKuntsevo District) Moscow Oblast (Odintsovsky District) Template:Coord This enclave became part of "Template:Ill" on 1 July 2012, with bizarrely twisting borders that touch Krasnogorsky and Odintsovsky Districts and Zvenigorod Urban Okrug. Two landowners, MKZ "Moscow Stud Farm N1" (about 1100 hectares) and VTB Bank with 1,082 hectares,[47] own nearly all of it.
(2 parcels) Template:Hs~1.7 Template:Country data Russia Tatarstan (Agryzsky District) Udmurtia (Kiyasovsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Two enclaves
Template:Ill Template:Hs~3.0 Template:Country data Russia Tatarstan (Mendeleyevsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Udmurtia (Grakhovsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord Lies on the Template:Ill
(4 parcels) Template:Country data Russia Tatarstan (Drozhzhanovsky District) Chuvashia (Shemurshinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord Four enclaves
upper Inesh valley Template:Hs~2.4 Template:Country data Russia Tatarstan (Kaybitsky District) Chuvashia (Yantikovsky District) Template:Coord
Template:Ill Template:Hs~10 Template:Country data Russia Chuvashia (Yalchiksky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Tatarstan (Buinsky District) Template:Coord
Chuvashskiye Entugany – Template:Ill Template:Hs~1.2 Template:Country data Russia Chuvashia (Shemurshinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Tatarstan (Buinsky District) Template:Coord
Template:Ill Template:Country data Russia Chuvashia (Shemurshinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Tatarstan (Drozhzhanovsky District) Template:Coord west of Malaya Tsilna
(3 parcels) Template:Country data Russia Chuvashia (Krasnochetaysky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Nizhny Novgorod Oblast (Pilninsky District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord Three enclaves
(4 parcels) Template:Country data Russia Nizhny Novgorod Oblast (Pilninsky District) Chuvashia (Krasnochetaysky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord Four enclaves
(3 parcels) Template:Hs~55 Template:Country data Russia Omsk Oblast (Krutinskiy District) Tyumen Oblast (Abatskiy District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord Three enclaves
(2 parcels) Template:Hs~13 Template:Country data Russia Tyumen Oblast (Abatskiy DistrictTemplate:Ill) Omsk Oblast (Krutinskiy District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Two enclaves
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Kemerovo Oblast (Novokuznetskiy District) Altai Krai (Yeltsovsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Tatarstan (Arsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Mari El Republic (Morkinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Tyumen Oblast (Nizhnetavdinsky District) Sverdlovsk Oblast (Slobodo-Turinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
(1 parcel) Template:Hs~1.0 Template:Country data Russia Penza Oblast (Mokshansky District) Mordovia (Insarsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Mordovia (Kovylkinsky District) Penza Oblast (Narovchatsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Mordovia (Tengushevsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Ryazan Oblast (Kadomsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
Template:Ill Template:Country data Russia Ryazan Oblast (Kadomsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Mordovia (Tengushevsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Kaluga Oblast (Mosalsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Smolensk Oblast (Ugransky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
Porzhala tract Template:Country data Russia Arkhangelsk Oblast (Kargopolsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Vologda Oblast (Vytegorsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord One enclave
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Sverdlovsk Oblast (Achitsky District) Perm Krai (Suksunsky District) Template:Coord One enclave
(3 parcels) Template:Country data Russia Kirov Oblast (Verkhnekamsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Perm Krai (Gaynsky District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord, Template:Coord
Template:Ill Template:Hs~0.8 Template:Country data Russia Kirov Oblast (Oparinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Komi Republic (Priluzsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord
Khoseda-Khardsky 5.12 Template:Country data Russia Nenets Autonomous Okrug (Zapolyarny District) Komi Republic (Template:Ill) Template:Coord
Template:Ill Template:Country data Russia Saint Petersburg (Krasnoselsky DistrictKrasnoye Selo) Leningrad Oblast (Gatchinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord
(1 parcel) Template:Hs~31 Template:Country data Russia Samara Oblast (Kinel-Cherkassky District) Orenburg Oblast (Buguruslansky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord
(1 parcel) Template:Hs~1.5 Template:Country data Russia Ulyanovsk Oblast (Starokulatkinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Saratov Oblast (Khvalynsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Udmurtia (Sarapulsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Perm Krai (Template:Ill) Template:Coord
• Template:Ill and • Template:Ill Template:Country data Russia Krasnoyarsk Krai (Sharypovsky District) Khakassia (Ordzhonikidzevsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord, Template:Coord
(1 parcel) Template:Country data Russia Astrakhan Oblast (Limansky District) Kalmykia Template:Coord
(2 parcels) Template:Country data Russia Kalmykia (Chernozemelsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Astrakhan Oblast (Limansky District) Template:Coord, Template:Coord
Cerca de Villaño[48] 0.0036 Template:Country data Spain Basque Country (BiscayOrduña-Urduña) Castile and León (Province of BurgosValle de Losa) Template:Coord
Template:Bulletedlist Template:Hs Template:Unbulletedlist Template:Country data Spain Castile and León (Province of PalenciaPomar de Valdivia) Cantabria (Valderredible) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Two enclaves
Dehesa de la Cepeda Template:Hs~14 Template:Country data Spain Community of Madrid (Santa María de la Alameda) Castile and León Template:Coord On the northern slopes of Sierra de Guadarrama
Los Barrancos 1.26 Template:Country data Spain Castile-La Mancha (Province of GuadalajaraTorrejón del Rey) Community of Madrid Template:Coord
Template:Bulletedlist 27.55 Template:Country data Spain Navarre Aragon (Province of Zaragoza) Template:Coord, Template:Coord Petilla de Aragón is a municipality in northern Spain formed by these two enclaves.
Template:Bulletedlist 3.5 Template:Country data Spain Castile and León (Province of BurgosMiranda de Ebro) La Rioja Template:Coord, Template:Coord Two enclaves
Treviño 279.58 Template:Country data Spain Castile and León (Province of Burgos) Basque Country (Álava) Template:Coord
Valle de Villaverde 19.53 Template:Country data Spain Cantabria Basque Country (Biscay) Template:Coord
Fahr Abbey 0.0148 Template:Country data Switzerland Aargau (Baden DistrictWürenlos) Canton of Zurich (Dietikon DistrictUnterengstringen) Template:Coord From 1803 through 2007 this Benedictine convent was not part of a municipality.
Grimmenstein monastery Template:Country data Switzerland Appenzell Innerrhoden (Oberegg District) Appenzell Ausserrhoden (Walzenhausen) Template:Coord
Wonnenstein Friary Template:Country data Switzerland Appenzell Innerrhoden (Schlatt-Haslen) Appenzell Ausserrhoden (Teufen) Template:Coord
Münchenwiler 2.5 Template:Country data Switzerland Canton of Bern (Bern-Mittelland) Canton of Fribourg (See District) Template:Coord
• Surpierre and • Vuissens 10.43 Template:Country data Switzerland Canton of Fribourg (Broye District) Vaud Template:Coord, Template:Coord Surpierre includes the villages of Surpierre, Villeneuve, Cheiry and Prèvond-avaux.
Template:Ill 1.4 Template:Country data Switzerland Canton of Fribourg (See DistrictGurmels) Canton of Bern (Bern-Mittelland) Template:Coord
La Grande/La Petite Coudre (Céligny) Template:Country data Switzerland Canton of Geneva (Céligny) Vaud (Nyon District) Template:Coord The municipality of Céligny consists of two exclaves of the Canton of Geneva within the Canton of Vaud. The smaller of the two is enclaved within Vaud. The larger one also has a water border with France and thus is not an enclave.
Steinhof 1.64 Template:Country data Switzerland Canton of Solothurn (Wasseramt DistrictAeschi) Canton of Bern (Oberaargau) Template:Coord
Slavutych 2.53 Template:Country data Ukraine Kyiv Oblast Chernihiv Oblast Template:Coord
Kotsiubynske 0.87 Template:Country data Ukraine Kyiv Oblast (Irpin) Kyiv (Sviatoshyn) Template:Coord
• the above-water part of Liberty Island and • the original portion of Ellis Island not created by landfill 0.0785 Template:Flagu New York (New York CityManhattan) New Jersey (Hudson CountyJersey City) Template:Coord, Template:Coord The size of the original portion of Ellis Island and its environs is 4.68 acres (0.0189 km2 ) of the overall area of 27.5 acres.[49][50][51] From a 1998 U.S. Supreme Court decision it follows that a seawall that was completed in 1914 made the original Ellis Island a true enclave within New Jersey.
• (main part of city), • Ulugbek 334.8 Template:Country data Uzbekistan Tashkent Tashkent Province Template:Coord, Template:Coord
• (includes Khanabad and others) Template:Country data Uzbekistan Tashkent Province (Zangiata District) Tashkent Template:Coord

Other subnational

Enclaves that are not exclaves

File:LocationLesotho.svg
Lesotho (shown in red) is completely surrounded by South Africa

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Each enclave listed in this section has a legal status equivalent to the one other entity that entirely surrounds it. None of the enclaves has a separate main region of which it is a part.

National level

Some enclaves are sovereign states, completely surrounded by another one, and therefore not exclaves. Three such sovereign countries exist:

The same logic applies to many of the sub-national enclaves listed immediately following.

Country Area (km2) Enclaved within Coordinates Notes
Template:Country data Lesotho 30,355 Template:Country data South Africa
  1. REDIRECT Template:Coord ||
Template:Country data San Marino 61.2 Template:Country data Italy
  1. REDIRECT Template:Coord ||
Template:Country data Vatican City 0.44 Template:Country data Italy (Metropolitan City of Rome CapitalRome)
  1. REDIRECT Template:Coord ||

First-order subnational level

Name Area (km2) Parent Country Enclaved within Coordinates Notes
Australian Capital Territory 2358 Template:Country data Australia New South Wales Template:Coord
Vienna 414.65 Template:Country data Austria Lower Austria Template:Coord Vienna was the capital of Lower Austria until 1922, when it became a province of its own.
Between 1922 and 1986, Lower Austria did not have its own capital, and the province's administration had its seat in Vienna.
Mingachevir 47 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Yevlakh District Template:Coord
Naftalan 3.57263 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Goranboy District Template:Coord
Shaki 9 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Shaki District Template:Coord
Khankendi/Stepanakert 29.12 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Khojaly District/Askeran Province Template:Coord
Yevlakh 95 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Yevlakh District Template:Coord
Brussels 161.38 Template:Country data Belgium Flemish Region (Flemish Brabant) Template:Coord
Phnom Penh 678.46 Template:Country data Cambodia Kandal Province Template:Coord
Prague 496 Template:Country data Czech Republic Central Bohemian Region Template:Coord City serves as Region's capital
Frederiksberg 8.7 Template:Country data Denmark Copenhagen Template:Coord
Addis Ababa 527 Template:Country data Ethiopia Oromia Region (Oromia Special Zone Surrounding Finfinne) Template:Coord
Harari Region 334 Template:Country data Ethiopia Oromia Region (East Hararghe Zone) Template:Coord
Berlin 891.7 Template:Country data Germany Brandenburg Template:Coord
Budapest 525.2 Template:Country data Hungary Pest County Template:Coord City serves as County's capital.
Almaty 682 Template:Country data Kazakhstan Almaty Province Template:Coord
Astana 710.2 Template:Country data Kazakhstan Akmola Province Template:Coord
Baikonur 57 Template:Country data Kazakhstan Kyzylorda Province Template:Coord
Bishkek 127 Template:Country data Kyrgyzstan Chüy Region Template:Coord
Daugavpils 72.48 Template:Country data Latvia Augšdaugava Municipality Template:Coord City serves as Municipality's capital
Jelgava 60.56 Template:Country data Latvia Jelgava Municipality Template:Coord City serves as Municipality's capital
Rēzekne 17.48 Template:Country data Latvia Rēzekne Municipality Template:Coord City serves as Municipality's capital
Kuala Lumpur 243 Template:Country data Malaysia Selangor Template:Coord
Putrajaya 49 Template:Country data Malaysia Selangor (Sepang District) Template:Coord
Bamako 245 Template:Country data Mali Koulikoro Region (Kati Cercle) Template:Coord
Darkhan-Uul Province 3275 Template:Country data Mongolia Selenge Province Template:Coord
Niamey 239.3 Template:Country data Niger Tillabéri Region Template:Coord
Taipei 271.8 Template:Country data Taiwan New Taipei City Template:Coord
Bucharest 228 Template:Country data Romania Ilfov County Template:Coord
Adygea 7600 Template:Country data Russia Krasnodar Krai Template:Coord
Gwangju 501.24 Template:Country data South Korea South Jeolla Province Template:Coord
Damascus Governorate 1599 Template:Country data Syria Rif Dimashq Governorate Template:Coord
Dushanbe 124.6 Template:Country data Tajikistan Districts of Republican Subordination Template:Coord City serves as Region's capital
Arima 12 Template:Country data Trinidad and Tobago Tunapuna–Piarco Template:Coord
Kyiv 839 Template:Country data Ukraine Kyiv Oblast Template:Coord City serves as Oblast's capital
Amanat Al Asimah Governorate 126 Template:Country data Yemen Sana'a Governorate Template:Coord City of Sana'a serves as capital of both Governorates

Other subnational

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

County Enclaved borough Enclaved within County Enclaved borough Enclaved within
Burlington Fieldsboro Bordentown Township Monmouth Freehold Borough Freehold Township
Burlington Medford Lakes Medford Township Morris Morristown Morris Township
Burlington Pemberton Pemberton Township Morris Chester Borough Chester Township
Gloucester Swedesboro Woolwich Township Ocean Lakehurst Manchester Township
Hunterdon Flemington Raritan Township Ocean Lavallette Toms River Township
Hunterdon Lebanon Clinton Township Ocean Ocean Gate Berkeley Township
Mercer Hopewell Hopewell Township Ocean Tuckerton Little Egg Harbor Township
Mercer Pennington Hopewell Township Salem Woodstown Pilesgrove Township
Mercer Hightstown East Windsor Township Sussex Branchville Frankford Township
Middlesex Jamesburg Monroe Township Sussex Sussex[63] Wantage Township
Middlesex Metuchen Edison Township Warren Alpha Pohatcong Township
Monmouth Englishtown Manalapan Township Warren Washington Washington Township
Monmouth Farmingdale Howell Township

Exclaves that are not enclaves

An exclave must always be grouped with a main region of which it is a legal part. In the case of international waters, the main region consists of all international waters not in EEZs. All potential paths of travel from the exclave to its main region must cross one or more different administrative-territorial regions having the equivalent legal level. Each exclave listed in this section borders on more than one other region.

National level

Name Area (km2) Exclave of Coordinates Notes
Nakhichivan Autonomous Republic 5,500 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Template:Coord Bounded by Armenia, Iran, and Turkey
Strovilia (de facto) Template:Country data Cyprus Template:Coord Borders the British Sovereign Base Area (SBA) of Dhekelia and the de facto independent Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), which is unrecognised internationally. The TRNC has occupied and controlled the exclave; on 30 June 2000 the TRNC unilaterally absorbed it, despite United Nations condemnation and lack of recognition.
Gulf of Fonseca outer tridominium Template:Hs~190 Template:Country data Honduras Template:Coord Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua border the Gulf of Fonseca, a closed sea under international law. Each enjoys a 3-nautical mile littoral zone of sovereignty along its shores and islands in the gulf. The remaining water area in the gulf comprises a tridominium that is shared in common among all three nations. The littoral zones (territorial waters) abut each other in a way that forms two separate areas of tridominium waters in the gulf. The outer area opens directly to the Pacific Ocean and is separated from the inner area by the territorial waters of Salvadoran and Nicaraguan islets. The inner area is bordered by the waters of all three countries. The larger outer area is bordered only by the waters of El Salvador and Nicaragua and the closing line of the gulf, such that one cannot travel within the gulf from Honduras to the outer area except by passing through El Salvadoran and Nicaraguan waters. Therefore, the outer water area is an exclave of Honduras that is shared territorially with two other countries.[76][77][78] All three nations are "entitled outside the closing line to territorial sea, continental shelf and exclusive economic zone. Whether this situation should remain in being or be replaced by a division and delimitation into three separate zones is, as inside the Gulf also, a matter for the three States to decide."[77]
Gaza Strip (de jure) 360 Template:Country data State of Palestine Template:Coord Bounded by Israel, Egypt and the Mediterranean Sea, where the territorial sea and contiguous zone of Palestine are surrounded by those of Israel (the waters of Palestine and Egypt are separated by an Israeli corridor).
"Donut Hole", High Seas Template:Hs~190,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Russia and the United States (Alaska).[79]
"Banana Hole", High Seas Template:Hs~310,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Norway (including Svalbard), Faeroe Islands, Greenland, Jan Mayen (Norway) and Iceland
"Eastern Gap", High Seas Template:Hs~20,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Mexico (EEZ defined by Cape Catoche and Scorpion Reef in the Gulf of Mexico), the United States (EEZ defined by Loggerhead Key and the Gulf coast) and Cuba (EEZ extends northwest from Cayo Ines de Soto)[80]
High Seas Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Mauritius (Agalega Islands), Tromelin Island (France), Madagascar and Seychelles (Farquhar Atoll)
High Seas Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord In the South China Sea, the EEZs that are defined by Taiwan (Pratas Reef), the Philippines (Luzon Island and Cabra I.), the Spratly Islands of Dao Dinh Ba and Flat Island, and the Paracel Island of Dao Hoang Sa enclose an exclave. National sovereignty over many of the Spratly and Paracel Islands in the South China Sea is disputed. Hence, depending upon the claims involved, this exclave may be considered as being created by the EEZs of Taiwan and the Philippines, or by the EEZs of Taiwan, the Philippines and Viet Nam, or by the EEZs of Taiwan and mainland China, or by the EEZ of mainland China alone.
High Seas Template:Hs~100,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of French Polynesia, Cook Islands and Kiribati
High Seas Template:Hs~77,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Vanuatu, Solomon Islands and Fiji
High Seas Template:Hs~380,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Palau, Micronesia, Indonesia and Papua-New Guinea
High Seas Template:Hs~1,400,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Japan (outer islands, including Okino-tori-shima), Palau, the Philippines, Northern Marianas Islands and Micronesia
High Seas Template:Hs~800,000 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Nauru, Tuvalu, Micronesia, Northern Marianas Islands, Papua-New Guinea, Fiji, Kiribati and the Solomon Islands
"Western Gap", High Seas 17,467 Template:Country data United Nations Template:Coord Surrounded by the EEZs of Mexico (EEZ defined by Scorpion Reef and Cayo Arenas in the Gulf of Mexico) and the United States (EEZ defined by the Gulf of Mexico coast, including Wolf Island (south of Freeport, Texas, and Raccoon Island, Louisiana)) – This exclave no longer exists per se. In areas with natural resource deposits on the continental shelf, the UNCLOS allows nations to claim territory beyond the EEZ to a maximum of 350 NM. On 9 June 2000, the U.S. and Mexico divided the Western Gap by a line equidistant from both countries' coastlines. The new boundary divided the Western Gap, giving 38% of the area (6562 km2) to the U.S. and 62% to Mexico (10,905 km2).[80]

First-order subnational level

Name Area (km2) Parent Country Exclave of Coordinates Notes
Lienz District 2,016.41 Template:Country data Austria Tyrol Template:Coord The transfer of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol to Italy after World War I left the county of Tyrol in two parts.
includes Birinci Dördyol and İkinci Dördyol Template:Hs~17 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Aghdam District Template:Coord surrounded by Barda District and Tartar District
Zöhrabkənd[81] Template:Hs~4.0 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Quba Rayon Template:Coord Surrounded by Şabran Rayon and Siyəzən Rayon.[34]
includes Yalavanc[82] Template:Hs~25 Template:Coord
north end of Template:Ill (including dam and Template:Ill) Template:Hs~3.3 Template:Coord
south end of Template:Ill Template:Hs~4.1 Template:Coord
includes the villages of Vladimirovka and Astraxanovka[83] Template:Hs~36 Template:Country data Azerbaijan Oğuz Rayon Template:Coord Surrounded by Şəki Rayon, Ağdaş Rayon and Qəbələ Rayon.[34]
Voeren (Fourons) 50.63 Template:Country data Belgium Flemish Region and Flemish Community (province of LimburgArrondissement of Tongeren) Template:Coord
Comines-Warneton (Komen-Waasten) 61.09 Template:Country data Belgium Wallonia and French Community (province of HainautArrondissement of Mouscron) Template:Coord
• Belgian Eifel and • Land of Eupen Template:Hs628.84 and 224.80 Template:Country data Belgium German Speaking Community Template:Coord
Template:Coord
The two parts are separated by a part of the French Community.
Odžak 118 Template:Country data Bosnia and Herzegovina Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Posavina Canton) Template:Coord Sandwiched between Republika Srpska and Croatia. The rest of Posavina Canton also borders Brčko District, which is a condominium of FBiH and Republika Srpska.
contains Xianghe County, Sanhe City, and Dachang Hui Autonomous County 1,277 Template:Country data China Hebei province — (prefecture-level city of Langfang) Template:Coord Lodged between the municipalities of Beijing and Tianjin.
contains Xylofagou Template:Country data Cyprus Larnaca District Template:Coord
Gedeo Zone 1,352 Template:Country data Ethiopia South Ethiopia Regional State Template:Coord Between Sidama Region and Oromia Region. Part of Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region until the split of that region on 19 August 2023.
Template:Country data Iceland Ásahreppur Template:Coord
(2 parcels) Template:Country data Iceland Kópavogur Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Kitayama Village 48.21 Template:Country data Japan Wakayama Prefecture Template:Coord in the border between Mie and Nara prefectures
Kumanogawa Town 175.47 Template:Coord
Template:Hs~60 Template:Country data Latvia Olaine Municipality (Olaine parish) Template:Coord
• Gapfahl and • Guschgfiel/Matta/Güschgle Template:Country data Liechtenstein Balzers Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Rheinau–Tentscha Template:Country data Liechtenstein Eschen Template:Coord
Nendler Berg Template:Country data Liechtenstein Gamprin Template:Coord
• Riet, • Plankner Neugrütt (western part), and • Plankner Garselli Template:Country data Liechtenstein Planken Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Template:Coord
A fourth exclave is also an enclave (listed above)
• Plankner Neugrütt (eastern part), • Gritsch, and • Guschg Template:Country data Liechtenstein Schaan Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Template:Coord
A fourth exclave is also an enclave (listed above)
Turna und Sareis Template:Hs~6.6 Template:Country data Liechtenstein Triesenberg Template:Coord
• Vaduzer Riet, • Dachsegg, • Hindervalorsch, and • Pradamee-Hahnenspiel Template:Country data Liechtenstein Vaduz Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Template:Coord
An additional two exclaves are also enclaves (listed above)
Alexandru Ioan Cuza Template:Hs~59 Template:Country data Moldova Cahul District Template:Coord
contains Tvardița and Valea Perjei Template:Hs~170 Template:Country data Moldova Taraclia District Template:Coord
• Vulcănești, • Copceac and • Carbalia Template:Country data Moldova Gagauzia Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Template:Coord
(comprising five communes) Template:Country data Moldova Criuleni District Template:Coord
(2 parcels) Template:Country data Moldova Dubăsari District Template:Coord
Template:Coord
Separated by the Transnistrian controlled Dubăsari District. Transnistria is de facto independent, but not recognised by any member states of the United Nations.
Baganuur 620 Template:Country data Mongolia Ulaanbaatar Template:Coord Surrounded by Töv Province and Khentii Province
Viguí corregimiento 59.6 Template:Country data Panama Veraguas Province (Las Palmas District) Template:Coord Surrounded by Müna and Ñürüm districts of Ngöbe-Buglé Comarca, Tolé District of Chiriquí Province, and Cañazas District of Veraguas Province
Justo Fidel Palacios corregimiento 25.8 Template:Country data Panama Chiriquí Province (Tolé District) Template:Coord Bounded by Ngöbe-Buglé Comarca (Müna) and Veraguas Province (Las Palmas District)
Template:Ill Template:Hs~20 Template:Country data Russia Chuvashia (Shemurshinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord bordering on Tatarstan and Ulyanovsk Oblast
Template:Country data Russia Mordovia (Tengushevsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord bounded by Ryazan Oblast and Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
Template:Hs~16 Template:Country data Russia Ryazan Oblast (Yermishinsky DistrictTemplate:Ill) Template:Coord bounded by Mordovia and Nizhny Novgorod Oblast.
Rincón de Ademuz 370.22 Template:Country data Spain Valencian Community (Province of Valencia) Template:Coord between the provinces of Teruel in Aragon and Cuenca in Castile-La Mancha
Oberegg District (2 parcels) 14.67 Template:Country data Switzerland Appenzell Innerrhoden Template:Coord
Template:Coord
bounded by Appenzell Ausserrhoden and St. Gallen
Engelberg 74.85 Template:Country data Switzerland Obwalden Template:Coord separated by Nidwalden and Bern
• Stein District and • part of Schaffhausen District Template:Hs31.25 and 11.53 Template:Country data Switzerland Canton of Schaffhausen Template:Coord
Template:Coord
The only canton lying mostly on the north bank of the Rhine, it is cut into three parts by German corridors to the Rhine. The middle part is the largest and embraces the German enclave of Büsingen. The upper and middle parts border on Thurgau, the middle and lower parts on Zürich.
• Kleinlützel, Thierstein District and • part of Dorneck District Template:Hs16.34 and 25.69 Template:Country data Switzerland Canton of Solothurn Template:Coord
Template:Coord
both bounded on the south by Basel-Landschaft and on the north by France
the former Avenches District 59.91 Template:Country data Switzerland Vaud (Broye-Vully District) Template:Coord separated by the Canton of Fribourg
Hatta 140 Template:Country data United Arab Emirates Emirate of Dubai Template:Coord
Masfout 86.59 Template:Country data United Arab Emirates Emirate of Ajman Template:Coord
Manama 25.73 Template:Coord
the southerly of the emirate's two non-contiguous sections Template:Country data United Arab Emirates Ras al-Khaimah Template:Coord
Kentucky Bend 69.6 Template:Flagu Kentucky (Fulton County) Template:Coord Located inside a loop of the Mississippi River. The only road in the area goes south into Tennessee. This exclave exists because the Mississippi, which forms the boundary between Missouri (right bank) and Kentucky/Tennessee (left bank), crosses latitude 36°30', which defines part of the border between Kentucky and Tennessee, three times.

Other subnational

File:Liechtenstein - Gemeinden mit Exklaven.png
Administrative divisions of Liechtenstein
File:Map of Louisiana highlighting Saint Martin Parish.svg
St. Martin Parish in the U.S. state of Louisiana, shown here, is divided into two non-contiguous areas separated by Iberia Parish.
File:O'Hara Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States of America.png
O'Hara Township, Pennsylvania is divided into five non-contiguous areas.
File:Njmap-0259.png
South Hackensack, New Jersey is divided into three non-contiguous areas.
File:Wayne County Michigan Incorporated and Unincorporated areas Brownstown Township highlighted.svg
Brownstown Charter Township, Michigan is divided into three non-contiguous areas.

Semi-enclaves and semi-exclaves

Semi-enclaves and semi-exclaves are areas that, except for possessing an unsurrounded sea border, would otherwise be enclaves or exclaves.[3]Template:Rp[86]Template:Rp Semi-enclaves can exist as independent states that border only one other state. Vinokurov (2007) declares, "Technically, Portugal, Denmark, and Canada also border only one foreign state, but they are not enclosed in the geographical, political, or economic sense. They have vast access to international waters. At the same time, there are states that, although in possession of sea access, are still enclosed by the territories of a foreign state."[3]Template:Rp (At the time of publication, Canada and Denmark did not share a border. Portugal is not considered a semi-enclave.) Therefore, Vinokurov applies a quantitative principle: the land boundary must be longer than the coastline. Thus he classifies a state as a sovereign semi-enclave if it borders on just one state, and its land boundary is longer than its sea coastline.[3]Template:Rp Vinokurov affirms that "no similar quantitative criterion is needed to define the scope of non-sovereign semi-enclaves/exclaves."[3]Template:Rp[87]

Semi-enclaves that are not semi-exclaves

National level

Subnational level

Semi-enclaves that are also semi-exclaves

National level

Other subnational

  • Poland: Międzyodrze-Wyspa Pucka, a neighborhood of Szczecin, while mostly consisting of islands on the Oder river, possesses several thin strips of land on the west bank of the river, as well as in the northern portion of Ustowskie Mokradła islands.[89][90]

Semi-exclaves that are not semi-enclaves

National level

Pene-enclaves/exclaves (including inaccessible districts)

A pene-exclave is a part of the territory of one country that can be approached conveniently — in particular by wheeled traffic — only through the territory of another country.[92]Template:Rp Such areas are enclaves or exclaves for practical purposes, without meeting the strict definition; hence they are also called functional enclaves or practical enclaves.[3]Template:Rp Many pene-exclaves partially border their own territorial waters (i.e., they are not surrounded by other nations' territorial waters). A pene-enclave can also exist entirely on land, such as when intervening mountains render a territory inaccessible from other parts of a country except through alien territory. Thus, a pene-exclave has land borders with other territory but is not completely surrounded by the other's land or territorial waters. They can exhibit continuity of state territory across territorial waters but, nevertheless, a discontinuity on land, such as in the case of Point Roberts.[3]Template:Rp Along rivers that change course, pene-enclaves can be observed as complexes comprising many small pene-enclaves.[3]Template:Rp Attribution of a pene-enclave status to a territory can sometimes be disputed, depending on whether the territory is considered to be practically inaccessible from the mainland or not.[3]Template:Rp

National level

  • Austria:
    • The municipality of Jungholz is connected to the rest of Austria at a quadripoint at the summit of the mountain Sorgschrofen (1636 m). Road access is only via German land. However, Vinokurov (2007) states, "For all purposes, a connection in a single point does not mean anything. It is just like being completely separated. One cannot pass through a single point, nor is it possible to transport goods. It is not even possible to lay a telephone line."[3] (See above: Enclaves that are also exclaves.)
    • The Kleinwalsertal, a valley part of Vorarlberg, can only be reached by road from Oberstdorf, Germany.
    • Hinterriß and Eng (parts of the communes of Vomp and Eben am Achensee in Tyrol, Austria) are functional exclaves accessible by road only from Germany.
  • Belgium/France: Along the river Leie (Lys in French) between Halluin and Armentières, where the river forms the border, there are 7 small pene-exclaves of Belgium (province of Hainaut) on the southern side of the river and 7 small pene-exclaves of France (department of Nord) on the northern side of the river. This is due to minor changes in the course of the river since the border was fixed in 1830.
  • Belgium/Luxembourg: An Aldi supermarket located at Schmëtt, at the northernmost point of Luxembourg, is only accessible by road from Luxembourg by briefly driving into Belgium.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  • Belgium/Netherlands: On the Dutch side of the Meuse River, between the Belgian municipality of Visé and its neighbouring Dutch municipalities of Maastricht and Eijsden-Margraten, Belgium has two pene-exclaves, Presqu'ile de L'Ilal and Presqu'ile d'Eijsden. A Dutch pene-exclave, Presqu'ile Petit-Gravier, lies on the Belgian side. The states signed a treaty in 2016 to swap these plots of land, which are the result of river straightening prior to 1980.
  • Belize: Ambergris Caye is an island in Belize located south of the Mexican state of Quintana Roo. It is separated from the rest of the country and can only be reached on land by a bridge from Mexico.
  • Bolivia: Copacabana and the surrounding promontory are separated from the rest of Bolivia by Lake Titicaca, only joining by land to Peruvian territory. Access to Bolivia is only available via ferry.
  • Cambodia: Prasat Preah Vihear can only be reached by traveling through Thailand.
  • Canada:
    • St. Regis, Quebec: Part of the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation on the south shore of the Saint Lawrence River, it has a land border with St. Regis Mohawk Reservation in New York State; road access to the rest of Canada is only available through New York State.
    • Campobello Island, New Brunswick can be reached by road only by driving through the United States, across the border bridge to Maine. Connection with the rest of Canada is by ferry.
    • The entrance to Aroostook Valley Country Club near Fort Fairfield, Maine, is in the U.S., but most of the club's golf course and its clubhouse are in Canada. Members and their guests, as long as they remain on the club's property, are not required to clear Canadian customs. Although a shorter route to Canada exists, members coming from Canada must do a Template:Convert detour to report to U.S. border inspection before proceeding to the golf club.
    • The Haskell Free Library and Opera House straddles the border. The Canadian part of the building is a practical exclave of Canada, as most of the building is physically in Stanstead, Quebec, but the only public access to the building is via the front door on Caswell Avenue in Derby Line, Vermont, in the United States. (Emergency exits from the second floor open to Canada.) People in Canada may not enter or exit the building except by travelling into the U.S. A special exception allows library and opera house patrons to cross the border to enter and move about in the building, but they must return to their home country (or see the Customs office) to avoid being charged with illegally entering the other country.
    • The Salmon Glacier and Granduc Mine in Premier, British Columbia can only be reached by road through Hyder, Alaska.
  • Chile: Magallanes Region of Chile, the southernmost portion of the Chilean mainland, is a practical exclave. The southernmost location that can be reached by road from the core of Chile is Villa O'Higgins in Aysén Region. Before the construction of the Carretera Austral, and its side-routes, the practical exclave included the Aysén Region and other locations such as Futaleufú.
  • Croatia:
    • Croatia/Bosnia and Herzegovina: A few houses and the castle Zrinski, belonging to the municipality of Hrvatska Kostajnica, lie on the right bank of the Una river, and are connected to the municipality by a bridge. The border crosses the FK Partizan Kostajnica football club's pitch, leaving approximately 1/3 of the pitch on the Croatian territory.
    • Croatia/Serbia: The Croatian village of Kenđija is a pene-exclave on the left bank of the Danube, and can be reached by road only through Serbia (See Croatia–Serbia border dispute).
    • Croatia/Hungary: The Croatian village of Križnica lies on the left bank of the river Drava, and is connected to the rest of the country by a pedestrian bridge.
    • Croatia/Slovenia: A small portion of the Croatian village of Mali Tabor lies on the right bank of the river Sutla and can be reached only through Slovenian territory.
  • Denmark/Germany: Several farms on the border, e.g. Vilmkærgård (similar situation as Canada's Haskell Free Library, immediately above).[93] Between 1920 and 1927, the popular German tourist island Sylt was accessible only by boat from Højer, ceded to Denmark in 1920. A direct German route was built in 1927.
  • Estonia: Lutepää is a small village on the Värska-to-Saatse gravel road in southeast and it can only be reached by travelling through Russia (the one and only road through Lutepää cuts, on either side of the village, through Russia's Saatse Boot area).
  • Finland/Sweden: The city centre of the Finnish city of Tornio is a pene-enclave unreachable directly by land from Finnish territory, although connected to the rest of Finland by a pair of bridges. The neighbouring Swedish municipality of Haparanda has two similar pene-enclaves unreachable directly from Swedish territory. One is an islet crossed by the international border at a golf course on the line between Tornio and Haparanda.
  • France: The territorial water of Canada completely surrounds that of the French territorial collectivity of St Pierre and Miquelon except for an EEZ corridor 10.5 NM (19.4 km) wide stretching 200 NM (370 km) to the south. This corridor is wholly enclosed within the EEZ of Canada due to the EEZ of Sable Island to the southeast of Nova Scotia.[94]
  • France: The French village of Montfroc (Drôme) is a pene-exclave surrounded by Alpes-de-Haute-Provence and the salient of Drôme.
  • Germany/Switzerland:
    • The smaller part of the German city of Konstanz, which includes the Altstadt (old town), lies to the south of the Rhine and has no land border with Germany, being otherwise surrounded by Switzerland; it is linked to the rest of Konstanz, and by extension to the rest of Germany, by a bridge.
    • The Swiss town of Stein am Rhein has only a bridge over the Rhine connecting it to the rest of Switzerland, which it does not border on land, and is otherwise surrounded by Germany.
  • Guatemala/Mexico: The changing course of the Río Suchiate has created pene-exclaves on both banks of the river.
  • Guyana/Venezuela: The coastal border runs in a straight, northwest–southeast line next to the beach, producing a pene-exclave of Guyana on Isla Corocoro 12 miles long and 300 feet wide at its narrowest.[95]
  • Hong Kong: Shenzhen Bay Control Point (aka Hong Kong Port Area) (0.50 km2,[96][97] Template:Coord), Hong Kong's immigration/customs control point that is surrounded by China (Guangdong province – Nanshan district), is located at the northern terminus of the Hong Kong–Shenzhen Western Corridor. It is contiguous with the rest of Hong Kong only by the road surface of the motorway (the sea, including the clearance between the sea and the bridge, and the airspace remain under Chinese jurisdiction).[98] The Hong Kong Government must pay rent to the Shenzhen municipal government for the use of the port area, amounting to Template:Yuan 6 million per year[99] until 2018, when a deal was reached to slash it to Template:Yuan 1,000 starting from 2019.[100] The rental agreement lasts until 30 June 2047.[99]
  • Ireland/United Kingdom: The westernmost region of County Monaghan in Ireland contains a pene-enclave jutting into County Fermanagh, United Kingdom, known as the Drummully Polyp or Salient (also locally as Coleman Island after the name of its northernmost townland, Coleman). There are two inaccessible districts: Drumard in the 'polyp' itself, belongs to Ireland and is inaccessible directly by road from any other part of Ireland; the village of Summerhill, County Fermanagh in the United Kingdom is similarly inaccessible from the rest of the United Kingdom. The A3 (UK) and N54 (Ireland) road, known as the Concession Road, crosses the border here 4 times in a short distance.[101]
  • Italy:
    • The Livigno valley near the Swiss border was at one time accessible only from Switzerland and was exempt from Italian customs, an exemption that continues today even though road access to the rest of Italy has been established. It is therefore excluded from EU VAT area.
    • The village of Bagni di Craveggia can only be reached by travelling through the Canton of Ticino in Switzerland. The village never became part of Switzerland, as the pastures surrounding it were owned by the people of Vigezzo Valley, rather than the people of the Swiss Onsernone Valley, at the end of which the village is situated. Consequently, the Swiss franc is commonly used.
    • On the San Marino/Italy border, there is Italian land east of the River San Marino that does not join to any other part of 'dry' Italian territory. This area is only a few metres wide, and follows the river's course for around 500 metres, and is close to the Strada del Lavoro.
  • Lithuania: Curonian Spit's northern part in the Klaipėda District is bounded by Russia and the Baltic Sea, but has the common territorial waters of Lithuania.
  • Mexico/United States of America: Shifts in the meandering course of the lower Rio Bravo del Norte (Rio Grande) have created numerous pene-exclaves. Under the Boundary Treaty of 1970 and earlier treaties, the two nations have maintained the actual course of the river as the international boundary, but both must approve proposed changes. From 1989 to 2009, there were 128 locations where the river changed course, causing land that had been on one side of the river to then occupy the opposite bank. Until the boundary is officially changed, there are 60 small pene-exclaves of the state of Texas now lying on the southern side of the river, as well as 68 such pene-exclaves of Mexico on the northern side of the river. The last such exchange (of pre-1989 river cuts) occurred in 2009, after languishing as a proposal for 20 years.
  • Malaysia: In the state of Sarawak on the island of Borneo, the Limbang Division is completely cut off from the rest of the state's road network. The Limbang District in the division is only accessible by road through Brunei, as it is located between Brunei's main portion and the Temburong District. The Lawas District, on the other hand, lies between Temburong and the state of Sabah. As Sabah and Sarawak have autonomy in immigration affairs, immigration checks are required when travelling into or out of the Limbang Division by road.
  • Namibia: Mpalila Island can only be reached from the rest of the country by travelling through Botswana.
  • Netherlands: Part of the province of Zeeland, namely Zeelandic Flanders is accessible by land only through the country of Belgium, although it is accessible by sea from the rest of the province of Zeeland. There is a tunnel, the Westerscheldetunnel, which also links Zeelandic Flanders to the rest of the province.
  • Norway/Sweden: Properties 79/3 and 79/4 (Template:Coord) at Trosterud in Aurskog-Høland Municipality, Norway, are only accessible by a road that follows the Norwegian–Swedish boundary.[102] Some nearby houses in Sweden are only accessible from that road that is connected to a larger road only in Norway.
  • Portugal: An area north of Tourém is cut off from the rest of Portuguese territory by the lake Encoro de Salas, being surrounded by Spanish territory. It is accessible by a road bridge, but otherwise does not border the rest of Portugal.
  • Russia:
    • Dubki area is bounded by Estonia and Lake Peipsi-Pihkva.
    • The settlement of Maloje Kulisko is separated from the rest of the country by the Kuuleski River; the village is otherwise surrounded by Estonian territory, although as it is a bog island, it is not accessible from Estonia either.
    • Vistula Spit's eastern part in the Kaliningrad Area is bounded by Poland and the Baltic Sea, but has the common territorial waters of Russia.
  • Senegal: An area of marshy land, approximately Template:Convert south of Tiong, Mauritania is owned by Senegal, but is inaccessible from any other part of Senegal. Coastal waters, however, are contiguous.
  • Serbia/Bosnia and Herzegovina: In the vicinity of Međurečje a salient belonging to Serbia is connected by a 30-metre-wide, 660-metre-long land corridor. It has road access only by passing through Bosnia and Herzegovina (43°36'10.3"N 19°15'49.5"E).
  • Slovenia: A farmhouse and a few other buildings in the village of Rigonce on the left bank of the river Sotla/Sutla can only be reached through Croatia.
  • Spain: Os de Civís is inaccessible via any other part of Spanish territory, as one has to travel via Andorra.
  • Sweden: The settlements Naimakka, Keinovuopio and some few more farms located on the Swedish side of the Könkämäeno river have road access only on the Finnish side.
  • Togo: A territory in the northwestern end of Togo is only accessible through Burkina Faso.[3]Template:Rp
  • Turkey:
    • The European section of Turkey is bounded by Greece and Bulgaria. Despite that the European section and the Asian section of Turkey are not geographically conterminous and are separated by the Turkish Straits, there are three connecting bridges, one highway and one railway tunnel in Istanbul and one bridge in Çanakkale.
    • The valley of Macahel, which includes five villages in northeastern Turkey, can only be reached by vehicle via Batumi in Georgia. In winter, as the snow shuts the paths that are completely within the borders of Turkey, the road via Batumi is the only way to travel there.
    • Turkey has a pene-exclave west of the Maritsa River opposite Edirne (Adrianople), with a land boundary of 10.8 km with Greece.[103][104]
  • Uganda: The extreme tip of Tanzania's Kanyiragwa peninsula is a very small pene-exclave of Uganda on the shore of Lake Victoria, created by the parallel of latitude that defines most of the border between Uganda and Tanzania.
  • United Kingdom: Northern Ireland is bounded by Ireland, the Irish Sea and the Atlantic Ocean.
  • United States of America/Canada:

Divided islands

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Subnational pene-enclaves/exclaves (inaccessible districts)

  • In Australia:
    • The sparsely-inhabited Jervis Bay Territory occupies a coastal peninsula. It is not part of the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), but the laws of the ACT do apply to it. The Jervis Bay Territory is administered by the government of the ACT and thus it is a pene-exclave, accessible only by travel through New South Wales.[123]
    • The border between Victoria and New South Wales runs along the top of the south bank of the Murray River as far east as the source, thus the entire bank between the source and South Australian border technically constitutes a pene-enclave of New South Wales, accessible by crossing the river by road only through Victoria.
  • In Brazil:

Divided islands

Historic enclaves/exclaves

National level

Name[1] Area (km2) Exclave of Enclaved within Coordinates Notes Existed
Indo-Bangladesh enclaves (91 parcels) 21.8 Template:Country data Bangladesh (Rangpur DivisionPanchagarh, Nilphamari, Lalmonirhat, and Kurigram districts) Template:Country data India (West Bengal state – Cooch Behar and Jalpaiguri districts) approx. Template:Coord All parcels were both enclaves and exclaves. 21 of the 91 former Bangladeshi exclaves were counter-enclaves. These 91 Bangladeshi enclaves were extinguished on 31 July 2015, when the long-delayed Land Boundary Agreement with India was implemented, leaving Dahagram-Angarpota as the only extant enclave.[131] 1949 – 2015
Indo-Bangladesh enclaves (106 parcels) 69.5 Template:Country data India (West Bengal state – Cooch Behar and Jalpaiguri districts) Template:Country data Bangladesh (Rangpur DivisionPanchagarh, Nilphamari, Lalmonirhat, and Kurigram districts) Template:Coord (former third-order enclave) All parcels were both enclaves and exclaves. Three of the 106 former Indian exclaves were counter-enclaves and one was the world's only counter-counter enclave. All of the 106 Indian exclaves were extinguished on 31 July 2015, when the long-delayed Land Boundary Agreement with Bangladesh was implemented.[131] 1949 – 2015
Barak (de facto) 2.07[132] Template:Country data Kyrgyzstan (Kara-Suu DistrictOsh Region) Template:Country data Uzbekistan (Andijan Region) Template:Coord Kyrgyzstan's 1991 pre-independence border is the de jure international border, but much of it is hotly disputed with its neighbors. In August 1999, the area around Barak was occupied by Uzbekistan, cutting it off from Kyrgyz territory. Uzbek forces dug up and blockaded the road to Ak-Tash[133] while also allegedly seizing large areas of Kyrgyz land that had been loaned in the Soviet era but never returned.[134] They entrenched themselves within much of Kyrgyz border territory and refused to leave.[135] Barak became a de facto enclave only 1.5 km from the shifted main border.[136] Four Uzbek enclaves and Barak were major sticking points in delimitation talks,[137] and disputes centered on the areas of Barak, Sokh, Gava and Gavasay (stream).[138] (Map) In August 2018 Kyrgyz and Uzbek authorities agreed to a land swap that would eliminate the enclave.[139] The land swap became permanent in April 2024, when the Barak enclave was absorbed by Uzbekistan.[140] 1999 – 2024
Tarchen, Cherkip Gompa, Dho, Dungmar, Gesur, Gezon, Itse Gompa, Khochar, Nyanri, Ringung, Sanmar and Zuthulphuk[141][142] Template:Country data Bhutan Tibet 1640s –1959
  • Belgium:
    • Belgium had a counter-enclave located near Fringshaus from 6 November 1922 until 23 April 1949, while Germany owned the connecting roads that were part of the Roetgener Wald enclave. These roads met at a traffic island north of Fringshaus, with the 2279 m2 island itself being a part of Belgium. This counter-enclave was extinguished in 1949 when Belgium annexed the German roads that intersected at the traffic island. In 1958, when Belgium returned the east–west road to Germany, this traffic island also became part of the Roetgener Wald enclave
  • China:
    • Forbidden City – The Xinhai Revolution led to the overthrow of the Qing dynasty and the establishment of the Republic of China (ROC) in 1912. In exchange for the abdication of the last Qing emperor Puyi, the Qing court and the ROC government signed an agreement for the favourable treatment of the abdicated emperor. Puyi was allowed to retain his title as emperor and was accorded the courtesies as a foreign monarch by the ROC government, and the imperial court remained at the Forbidden City. The Dragon Flag of the Qing Dynasty remained hoisted inside the Forbidden City, certain government organs such as the Imperial Household Department, Imperial Clan Court and Ministry of Justice continued to exist within the palace walls, and the emperor continued to hold court, appoint officials and grant titles of nobility. Following the Beijing coup in 1924, the warlord Feng Yuxiang unilaterally revised the agreement, abolishing Puyi's title of emperor, his right to live in the Forbidden City and other related arrangements.
    • Unlike Hong Kong Island, the Kowloon Peninsula and the New Territories that were added later constituted a pene-exclave of the United Kingdom from 1860/1898 until 1997. Kowloon south of Boundary Street was ceded in perpetuity, whereas the New Territories was turned over under a 99-year lease.
    • Kowloon Walled City was a counter-enclave belonging to China on the Kowloon Peninsula of Hong Kong from 1898 to 1993. The question of jurisdiction led to a hands-off approach by Chinese and British authorities over the years until the quality of life became intolerable. A mutual decision to demolish the 2.6 hectares of structures was announced in 1987 and completed in 1994.
    • Kwang-Chou-Wan was a pene-exclave of France on the south coast of China from 1898, upon its lease to France by Qing China, until its return by France in 1946; its territory included the islands in the bay and land on both banks of the Maxie River, covering 1300 km2 of land.
    • Kwantung was a pene-exclave of Russia and later Japan in the southern part of the Liaodong Peninsula in Manchuria that existed from 1898 to 1945 and included the ports of Port Arthur (or Ryojun) and Dal'niy (or Dairen), the latter founded in 1899. It was leased to Russia from 1898 until 1905, when Japan replaced Russia as leaseholder. After World War II, the Soviet Union occupied the territory in 1945, jointly administering it with the Chinese before turning it over to the People's Republic of China in 1955.
    • Jinzhou walled central city remained an enclave of Chinese territory within Kwantung under the lease with Russia. This provision was substantially ignored by Japan after it replaced Russia.[143]
    • Jiangxi, officially the Chinese Soviet Republic (CSR), was an unrecognised proto-state within the territory of China's Jiangxi (Kiangsi) province. The state was proclaimed on 7 November 1931 by future Chinese Communist Party leaders and comprised discontiguous territories that included 18 provinces and 4 counties under CSR control within areas controlled by the Nationalist government.
    • Macao was a pene-exclave of Portugal on the coast of the South China Sea from 1557 until 1999.
    • Zhongshan Dao island in the Pearl River Delta was divided between China and Macao as a pair of pene-exclaves dating from ratification of the Treaty of Tientsin in 1862 through the 1999 return of Macao to China.
    • Qingdao, with an area of 552 km2, was a pene-exclave of Germany (also known as the Kiautschou Bay concession), and later Japan, from 1898 to 1922, adjacent to Jiaozhou Bay on the southern coast of the Shandong Peninsula in East China. The village of Qingdao became the German colony of Tsingtau. In 1914, with the outbreak of World War I, the Republic of China canceled the lease with Germany. Japan then occupied the city and province until December 1922, when it reverted to Chinese rule.
    • Shanghai was the location of British (from 1846) and American (from 1848) Concessions (later Shanghai International Settlement from 1863 to 1943) and the Shanghai French Concession from 1849 to 1946. Unlike the British sovereign colonies of Hong Kong Island and Wei-hai-wei, these foreign concessions always remained Chinese sovereign territory.
    • Wei-hai-wei was a pene-exclave of the United Kingdom that bordered the Yellow Sea in eastern Shantung province of China. The city was a British colony, known also as the Weihai Garrison and sometimes as Port Edward, from 1898 to 1 October 1930, when it was returned to China. Its current name is Weihai.
    • Wei-hai-wei walled central city was excluded from the leased territory and remained an enclave of Chinese territory within Wei-hai-wei.[144]
  • Denmark:
  • France:
    • The island of Mont-Saint-Michel at the mouth of the Couesnon River prior to 1879 was a pene-exclave of Normandy, but only during low tide, when it was connected by a tidal causeway to the neighbouring coast. The raised causeway that was then built was replaced with a light bridge opened in 2014, thus making Mont-Saint-Michel an island again.
    • Saint Pierre and Miquelon, a French territorial collectivity, was completely surrounded from 1763 until 1992 by the waters of Canada (what would otherwise today be considered Canada's contiguous zone), when an EEZ corridor 10.5 NM (19.4 km) wide was created, stretching 200 NM (370 km) to the south, terminating within and surrounded by Canada's EEZ.
  • Germany
    • East Prussia (1919–1939), a large German semi-exclave during the Weimar Republic, was separated from Germany after World War I, when Poland regained access to the Baltic Sea (Polish corridor). The territory of East Prussia (essentially the old Duchy of Prussia) is now divided into Kaliningrad Oblast in Russia, the Warmian-Masurian Voivodship in Poland, and Klaipėda County in Lithuania.
    • Template:Ill, (1922–1949), surrounded by Belgian territory, was the sixth and southernmost of the Vennbahn enclaves created in 1922; it contained five households.[3] The railway suffered severe damage during World War II and was not rebuilt. It ceased being an enclave when Belgium annexed the entirety in 1949. Hemmeres was reintegrated into West Germany on 28 August 1958, by an agreement with Belgium.
    • Jestetten is a German town in the district of Waldshut in Baden-Württemberg that was inaccessible except by travelling through Switzerland, until a connecting road was constructed.
    • Template:Ill was two enclaves from 1949 to 1958. Unlike its present configuration, the German enclave in 1922 was smaller in area because the central portion (between Grenzweg and a boundary with three turning points west of the Schleebach stream) was Belgian territory.[145] Because the road connecting the two outer German portions (Highways 258/399) was German territory until 1949, the German land formed one enclave. The intersecting north–south road from Fringshaus to Konzen (now Highway B258, which has no connection to the Belgian road network[146]) was also part of the oddly shaped enclave. In 1949 Belgium annexed these roads, thus separating the enclave into two enclaves for the next nine years. In 1958 Belgium ceded the center section of territory to West Germany, in addition to returning the adjacent east–west connecting road.[147] This created one larger enclave in its present form. Highway B258 is the only portion of land that, once having been a part of the Roetgener Wald enclave, is now not within the enclave.
    • Selfkant: Between 1963 and 2002, the N274 road between Roermond and Heerlen, which was part of sovereign Dutch territory, passed through the German Selfkant, which had been annexed by the Netherlands in 1949. Selfkant, except for the road, was returned to Germany in 1963. Until the road was also returned to Germany in 2002, the western portion of Selfkant was an exclave of Germany.
    • Verenahof was a German exclave within Switzerland until 1967, at which time its border became attached to Germany through a treaty implementing a land swap of a total of just under 1.06 km2 in equal shares.[148]
    • West Berlin, upon the division of Berlin after World War II and before the reunification of Germany in 1990, was de facto a West German exclave within East Germany. Twelve small West Berlin land areas, such as Steinstücken, were in turn separated from the main body of West Berlin, some by only a few metres. In addition, there were several small areas of East Berlin that were surrounded by West Berlin. All of Berlin was ruled "de jure" by the four Allied powers; this meant that West Berlin could not send voting members to the German Parliament and that its citizens were exempt from conscription. West Berlin exclaves were:
    • East Berlin exclaves:[149]
      • Template:Ill (E) (1949–1990) dis-enclaved at re-unification
      • Eiskeller (N) (1949–1990) dis-enclaved at re-unification
      • Eiskeller (S) (1949–1990) dis-enclaved at re-unification
      • West-Staakende jure part of Soviet sector but de facto administered by Spandau Borough in the British sector; seized by East Germany in 1951 and made an exclave of East Berlin's Borough of Mitte, which it remained officially until being incorporated in 1961 by the neighbouring town of Falkensee in non-Berlin East Germany.
  • Greece:
  • Hungary:
  • India:
    • Dadra and Nagar Haveli were enclaves inland from the Arabian Sea coast covering an area of 487 km2. After invasion by pro-Indian Union forces in 1954, they achieved de facto independence from Portugal. They and three Portuguese pene-exclaves, the city of Goa and the two small coastal exclaves of Daman and Diu, were the last remnants of Portuguese India, which existed from 1505 until military conquest by India on 19 December 1961. (A 1956 map also shows a counter-enclave within Nagar Haveli belonging to Bombay, approximately corresponding to the village of Maghval – this village was not ceded to Portugal because of its inhabitants' caste's sacrosanctity).[150]
    • French India – Pondicherry and the other exclaves of Karaikal, Mahé and Yanaon were absorbed into India de facto in 1954 and de jure in 1962 after the Algerian War. In 1761 the British captured all of them from the French (and also Chandannagar), but the Treaty of Paris (1763) returned them to France. Those possessions passed again to British control before finally being handed over to the French in 1816/1817 under the 1814 Treaty of Paris. Pondicherry, Karaikal, Mahé and Yanaon came to be administered as the Union Territory of Puducherry in 1963. All four are now sub-national ex(en)claves within India.
      • Pondicherry was the site of a trading center set up by the French East India Company in 1674, which eventually became the chief French settlement in India, after passing several times between Dutch, British and French control. It comprised 12 non-contiguous parts: three pene-exclaves on the Bay of Bengal and nine nearby true enclaves. Inside the main Pondicherry exclave was a small counter-enclave belonging to India straddling the Chunnambar River.
      • Mahé (or Mayyazhi), a small (9 km2) town, was a pene-exclave on the Malabar Coast of the Arabian Sea from 1721. Mahé was composed of three non-contiguous parts, including Mahé town and two true enclaves: Cherukallayi and one consisting of Palloor, Chalakkara and Pandakkal.
      • Yanaon (or Yanam), a 30 km2 pene-exclave in the delta of Godavari River, nine kilometres from the Coromandel Coast and Bay of Bengal. It was a Dutch colony before France overtook it in 1723 and made it a French colony.
      • Karaikal was a small coastal pene-exclave on the Bay of Bengal acquired by France in 1739 from the regime of Raja Pratap Singh of Tanjore. By 1760 it included 81 villages around Karaikal town.
      • Chandannagar was a small true enclave established as a French colony in 1673, located on the right bank of the Hooghly River 30 kilometres north of Kolkata. Bengal was then a province of the Mughal Empire. The British returned the city to France in 1816, along with a 7.8 km2 nearby enclave. In May 1950, with French approval, India assumed de facto control, with the de jure transfer in June 1952. In 1955 it was integrated into West Bengal state.
      • Trincomalee was in present-day Sri Lanka (then a part of India) located on the Indian Ocean east coast of the island. By September 1782 it was occupied by the French after the Battle of Trincomalee with the British, only to be ceded back to the British in 1783.
  • Israel:
    • Mount Scopus (in Jerusalem) was an Israeli exclave in Jordan between 1948 and 1967, before being reunited with West Jerusalem following the Six-Day War. Similarly, Ein Gev, located on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, was a pene-exclave in Syria until Israel took over the Golan Heights territory, again during the Six-Day War.
File:Italian States in 1789.png
Italy in 1789 before the French Revolutionary Wars
File:Pommerania and surrounding territories 1618.png
The territory of Duchy of Pomerania-Stettin in 1618, consisting of four exclaves.
  • Poland:
  • Portugal:
  • Slovakia: Part of the settlement Sidónia was once reached by road only from Czechia. After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia at the end of 1992, the new state border was originally along the Vlárka River. Several houses in the central part of the village, inhabited by nine families, stand on the left bank, which fell to Slovakia. On 25 July 1997, the Czech-Slovak state border was modified and the small area on the left bank with a few houses in the centre of Sidónia became part of Czechia (exchanged for the settlement of U Sabotů). The state border has also been drawn since then along the centre of the road from the Vlárský Pass.
  • Spain:
    • Ifni was a pene-exclave of Spain on the Atlantic coast of Morocco from 1859 to 1969.
  • South Africa:
    • Bophuthatswana was a bantustan or "black homeland" that was granted nominal independence by apartheid South Africa from 1977 until being re-absorbed in April 1994, but it remained unrecognised internationally. It consisted of a scattered patchwork of individual enclaves, six that were true enclaves within South Africa and two that bordered Botswana and South Africa.
  • Yemen:
    • Cheikh Saïd is a rocky peninsula in present-day Yemen between the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea. Although as late as 1970, the Petit Larousse described it as having been a "French colony from 1868 to 1936," France never claimed formal jurisdiction or sovereignty over it.
  • The southern section of the Emirate of Ras al-Khaimah was a national-level exclave surrounded by other emirates of the UAE and Oman for three months after UAE independence in 1971 until it joined the UAE in 1972.
  • Between 1991 and 2003, Russia had three tiny pene-exclaves on tips of the lakeshore that bordered the Lithuanian side of Lake Vištytis. Before a new border treaty went into force on 12 August 2003, the border ran along most of the waterline of the beaches on the Lithuanian side, so anyone paddling in the water was technically crossing into Russia.
  • Schirgiswalde – In accordance with terms of the 1635 Peace Treaty of Prague, Austria transferred land (Ober- and Niederlausitz) to Saxony. However, because of religious affiliation with Austria, Schirgiswalde and five other towns (Güntersdorf, Gerlachsheim, Winkel, Taubentränke and Neuleutersdorf) within the transferred land remained with Austria, becoming Austrian enclaves within Saxony. 174 years later, to address problems as states began to consolidate, the 1809 Peace Treaty of Vienna mandated the transfer of these six enclaves from Austria to Saxony. However, the transfer did not occur until 1845 because of the need to correct mistakes in the names of the villages stated in the treaty and subsequent neglect. During that time, Schirgiswalde was de facto independent until economic reasons compelled the final transfer of the enclaves, thus extinguishing them.[3]
  • Sikkim – Dopta and Chumbi were exclaves of Sikkim within Tibet until China occupied them in 1958.
  • Sweden – The Peace of Westphalia in 1648 granted certain possessions of the Holy Roman Empire to the Swedish Empire (extant 1611–1721) to be held as fiefs of the Holy Roman Empire:
  • Bremen-Verdenstates of the Holy Roman Empire bordering the North Sea; in "personal union with Sweden" until 1712, when they fell under Danish occupation in wartime.
  • Swedish Pomerania – a state on the Baltic coast in present-day Germany and Poland; a small part was ceded to Prussia following war in 1720 and the entirety in 1815 during the Congress of Vienna.
  • town of Wismar – town in northern Germany on the Baltic Sea; transferred to Germany in 1903 when Sweden renounced its claim.
File:Bantustans in South Africa.svg
Map of the heavily partitioned black homelands in South Africa at the end of apartheid in 1994
  • The tomb of Suleyman Shah (b. ca. 1178–d. 1236) was located in or near Qal'at Ja'bar in modern-day Syria; in accordance with the 1921 Treaty of Ankara, the tomb "shall remain, with its appurtenances, the property of Turkey, who may appoint guardians for it and may hoist the Turkish flag there." The treaty is silent regarding sovereignty of the 6.3 hectares of land where the tomb rests. The tomb was relocated in 1973 prior to the creation of Lake Assad.
  • Ada Kaleh – Prior to the creation of modern Turkey, the Ottoman Empire de jure held a small island in the Danube River surrounded by the waters of Romania (which de facto controlled the island), from the Berlin Treaty of 1878 until 1923 when, under the Treaty of Lausanne, Romania obtained formal sovereignty over it. It was submerged in 1970 by the construction of a hydroelectric plant, displacing up to 1000 residents.
  • Following the establishment of the Irish Free State, three deep water Treaty Ports at Berehaven, Queenstown (modern Cobh) and Lough Swilly were retained by the United Kingdom in accordance with the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 6 December 1921.[160] As part of the settlement of the Anglo-Irish Trade War in the 1930s, the ports were transferred to Ireland (the Free State's successor) in 1938 following agreements reached between the British and Irish Governments.
  • In 1625, King Charles I instituted the Order of the Baronets of Nova Scotia in an effort to colonize New Scotland, by offering the hereditary title, land ownership and power over new baronetcies in exchange for financing and materially supporting new settlements. Under Scots Law, Baronets "took seisin" by receiving symbolic "earth and stone" on the actual land, which was the feudal legal form of taking possession. However, to avoid a trans-Atlantic trip (and thus encourage applicants), the royal charter stated that "the realm of Nova Scotia, and original infeftment thereof, is holden of the kingdom of Scotland, and forms part of the County of Edinburgh." By royal decree, land in the courtyard at Edinburgh Castle was declared to be an integral part of Nova Scotia; thus, seisin at the castle was equivalent to seisin on the lands themselves.[161][162][163][164][165][166][167][168][169][170] The ceremony of seisin was performed in the following years for 64 of the original Baronets. This decree has never been annulled, which fuels a belief that this enclave still exists as a tiny enclave of Canada within the grounds of the famous Scottish castle.
  • Horseshoe Reef (1850–1908) in Lake Erie consisted of underwater ledges of sunken rock near Buffalo, New York. Great Britain ceded a fraction of an acre of underwater land that was entirely surrounded by Canadian waters to the United States to construct a lighthouse.[171] A 1908 treaty mandated a new survey in order to shift the boundary to include the reef in U.S. waters.
  • The Captain Cook Monument at Kealakekua Bay and about Template:Convert of land around it in Hawaii, United States, the place where James Cook was killed in 1779, is owned by the United Kingdom.[172][173][174][175] An historian on the occasion of the 50th anniversary recorded in 1928 that the white stone "obelisk monument [was] erected to the memory of Captain Cook, about 1876, and on land deeded outright to the British Government by Princess Likelike, sister of King Kalakaua, about the same year, so that that square is absolute British Territory."[176] Hawaii was a sovereign nation at the time. According to a recent writer, "The land under the monument was deeded to the United Kingdom in 1877 and is considered as sovereign non-embassy land owned by the British Embassy in Washington DC. ... the Hawaiian State Parks agency maintained that as sovereign British territory it was the responsibility of the UK to maintain the site."[177]
  • Lake of the Woods – the American border with present-day Canada as defined under the 1783 Treaty of Paris and the Anglo-American Convention of 1818 inadvertently created two small maritime exclaves of the U.S. in Angle Inlet. The border depended on determining the northwesternmost point of the Lake of the Woods. Johann Tiarks' survey in 1825 placed its location at the edge of a pond on the Angle Inlet.[178] (A 1940 academic study documented the location of Tiarks' point, which is in the immediate vicinity of Template:Coord (NAD83).[171]) In accordance with the 1818 treaty, the border ran south from this point to the 49th parallel. However, this line was "intersected at five points by the winding course of the boundary in the channel of the Northwest Angle Inlet; thus there were anomalously left two small areas of waters totaling two and a half acres belonging to the United States, yet entirely surrounded by Canadian waters."[171] They were centered at Template:Coord and Template:Coord. By treaty in 1925, the southernmost of these five intersecting points, 4785 ft. farther south than Tiarks' point, was adopted instead, which eliminated these exclaves.[171]
  • Panama Canal Zone, surrounded by Panama, the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean, was an American pene-exclave from 1903 to 1 October 1979, when the entity was extinguished by treaty with Panama. After that date, the former Canal Zone land remaining under U.S. sovereignty, greatly reduced in area, was a pene-exclave until 31 December 1999, when total transfer to Panama was complete.
  • At El Cerro de Doscientos Pies ("200-Foot Hill"), 3.19 hectares of land in Panama near Las Minas Bay were annexed by the U.S. on 24 September 1928 and added to the Canal Zone.[179][180] This true enclave apparently existed until 1 October 1979.
  • On 1 October 1979, the day the Panama Canal Treaty of 1977 took effect, most of the land within the former Canal Zone transferred to Panama. However, the treaty set aside many Canal Zone areas and facilities for transfer during the following 20 years. The treaty specifically categorized areas and facilities by name as "Military Areas of Coordination", "Defense Sites" and "Areas Subject to Separate Bilateral Agreement". These were to be transferred by the U.S. to Panama during certain time windows or simply by the end of the 243-month treaty period. On 1 October 1979, among the many such parcels so designated in the treaty, 35 emerged as true enclaves (surrounded entirely by land solely under Panamanian jurisdiction). In later years as other areas were turned over to Panama, nine more true enclaves emerged. Of these 44 true enclaves, 14 were related to military logistics, 7 were military communications sites, 5 Federal Aviation Administration facilities,[181] 5 military housing enclaves, 3 military base areas, 2 military research facilities, 2 parts of a bombing range, 4 secondary school parcels, 1 elementary school, and 1 hospital. At least 13 other parcels each were enclosed partly by land under the absolute jurisdiction of Panama and partly by an "Area of Civil Coordination" (housing), which under the treaty was subject to elements of both U.S. and Panamanian public law. In addition, the 1977 treaty designated numerous areas and individual facilities as "Canal Operating Areas" for joint U.S.-Panama ongoing operations by a commission. On the effective date of the treaty, many of these Canal Operating Areas, including Madden Dam, became newly surrounded by the territory of Panama. Just after noon local time on 31 December 1999, all former Canal Zone parcels of all types had come under the exclusive jurisdiction of Panama.[156][182][183][184][185][186]
  • The Val d'Aran is a valley in the Pyrenees mountains and a comarca in northwestern Catalonia, northern Spain. Most of it comprises the only part of Catalonia that is on the northern side of the Pyrenees. The Val d'Aran had been without direct access to the south side of the mountains, until the Vielha tunnel was opened in 1948.
  • Venda was a bantustan or "black homeland" that was granted nominal independence by apartheid South Africa from 1979 until being re-absorbed in April 1994, but it remained unrecognised internationally. It was an enclave that was not an exclave, bordering only South Africa and separated narrowly from Zimbabwe by the Madimbo corridor to the north. Venda itself also had a small exclave that was a true enclave in South Africa.
  • Walvis Bay was a South African pene-exclave bordered by the Atlantic Ocean and Namibia, before being incorporated with Namibia in 1994, four years after that country's independence.
  • Zadar (Zara) was a 104 km2 pene-exclave of Italy, bordering the Adriatic Sea and Croatia, from 1920 to 1944 (de facto due to abandonment by the Italian civilian administration) or 1947 (de jure under treaty).
  • Various other historical foreign concessions
  • Innumerable medieval enclaves within Europe

Subnational historic enclaves and exclaves

  • In Portugal until 2013, two civil parishes comprised the city of Estremoz. The parish of Santa Maria (the new town and its rural environs) surrounded an enclave, the walled old town of the parish of Santo Andre. The citadel inside Santo Andre was also a counter-enclave that belonged to Santa Maria.[201] The two parishes were united to form a new parish called Union of the Parishes of Estremoz (Santa Maria and Santo André), thus ending the only counter-enclave in Portugal.
  • In Russia:
    • Sheremetyevo is the location of the primary airport for Moscow. From 1995 to 2011 it was officially an enclave of the city of Moscow, but there was ambiguity regarding its association with Moscow Oblast. In 2011, the enclave was returned to Moscow Oblast, thus extinguishing it.
    • Vnukovo consisted of two enclaves of the city of Moscow to its southwest. On 1 July 2012, "New Moscow" was created by annexing additional land to the city, including the land that surrounded Vnukovo. The two are now exclaves of a Moscow city subdivision, and one is also an enclave.
    • Ust-Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug was an enclave (not exclave) within Irkutsk Oblast and was merged into it on 1 January 2008.
    • Agin-Buryat Autonomous Okrug was an enclave (not exclave) within Zabaykalsky Krai and was merged into it on 3 January 2008.
  • In South Africa, the Eastern Cape Province had an exclave that was surrounded by KwaZulu-Natal Province, containing the town of Umzimkulu. KwaZulu-Natal had an exclave, Mount Currie, that was surrounded by the Eastern Cape. Both were extinguished in 2006.
  • Switzerland
  • Turkey
  • Yalova was an exclave of Istanbul until it gained provincial status in 1995.
  • The Istanbul boroughs of Maslak, Ayazağa, and Huzur (part of Ayazağa until 1989)[202] together formed an exclave of Şişli district after the split of Kağıthane from Şişli resulting from a law passed by TBMM on 19 June 1987.[203] They were surrounded by Sarıyer to the north and east, Beşiktaş to the southeast, Kağıthane to the southwest, and Eyüp to the west. Finally, they were given to the district of Sarıyer after passing a law on 12 November 2012.[204] Note that Maslak and Ayazağa were part of Sarıyer between 1930 and 1954 before passing to Şişli due to the split of Şişli from Beyoğlu in 1954.[205]
  • Cumbernauld and Kirkintilloch formed an exclave at county level, as a part of the Scottish county of Dunbartonshire sandwiched between Stirlingshire and Lanarkshire. The exclave was dissolved after the municipal reforms of 1975.
  • Ardnamurchan, Morvern and the surrounding area also formed an exclave at county level, as a part of the Scottish county of Argyllshire bordered by Inverness-shire, separated from the rest of Argyllshire by Loch Linnhe. The exclave was dissolved in 1975 following the municipal reforms of that year.
  • Dudley in the West Midlands, England, was an exclave at municipal level, being in a part of the county of Worcestershire surrounded by Staffordshire. Upon the local government reforms of 1974, the exclave was dissolved.
  • Furness in England was an exclave of the county of Lancashire, known as "Lancashire-beyond-the-Sands" until 1974, when it became part of Cumbria.
  • Tetworth, historically part of Huntingdonshire, included an exclave at county level, as part of Huntingdonshire separated from the rest of the county by Cambridgeshire. The exclave was dissolved in 1974, when the whole of Huntingdonshire became part of Cambridgeshire.
  • The district of Wrexham Maelor existed from 1974 to 1996, being formed from parts of two administrative counties, including Flintshire. From Flintshire came the exclave of Maelor Rural District (bounded on three sides by England and on the west by the Welsh county of Denbighshire) and the enclave of the parish of Marford and Hoseley, surrounded and separated from Flintshire also by Denbighshire. They are now part of Wrexham.
  • Domesday Hundreds of Cheshire map in 1086 displays an enclave of Hamestan surrounded entirely by Middlewich.
  • The counties of Scotland before reorganisation in 1889 included dozens of exclaves. This was especially notable in the case of Cromartyshire, which was split into at least nine parts spread across Ross-shire.
  • Wales once had a third-order sub-national semi-exclave of its county of Caernarfonshire. This county had a semi-exclave consisting of the parishes of Llysfaen and Eirias and including the town of Old Colwyn, which was transferred to the surrounding county of Denbighshire in 1923.[206] In turn it surrounded a counter-semi-exclave of Denbighshire including the east part of Old Colwyn, which had very complex borders. This counter-semi-exclave in turn contained a counter-counter-semi-exclave of Caernarvonshire, that of "Coed-coch Cottage" covering 1.6 acres (0.65 ha). The counter-semi-exclave was annexed to the semi-exclave in 1879.[207]
  • Before 1974, and especially before 1844, there were many exclaves of counties in England and Wales.

Temporary enclaves or exclaves

Sometimes land is ceded temporarily to another country as a form of legal fiction.

Potential exclaves pending international resolution

See also

Template:GeoGroup

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

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  51. Richard G. Castagna; Lawrence L. Thornton, John M. Tyrawski. GIS and Coastal Boundary Disputes: Where is Ellis Island?. ESRI. Retrieved 2013-11-16. "The New York portion of Ellis Island is landlocked, enclaved within New Jersey's territory."
  52. Google Maps, showing Beijing International airport. https://www.google.ca/maps/place/Shunyi,+Beijing,+China/@40.0656499,116.5945627,13z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x35f10e639db67a1b:0x26c645466b3a9fe1?hl=en. The red-line highlights the exclave including Terminals 1 and 2. Terminal 3 is to the southeast of the exclave at the north end of the road loop seen there.
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  58. a b Art. 4, № 5 of Law № 142/85, from 18 November (law on the creation of municipalities)
  59. a b Art. 6, № 1 of Law № 8/93, from 5 March (law on the creation of civil parishes)
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  96. PWSC(2007-08)62, ITEM FOR PUBLIC WORKS SUBCOMMITTEE OF FINANCE COMMITTEE, HEAD 703 - BUILDINGS, Support – Boundary facilities (other than road works), 9GB – Construction of boundary-crossing facilities at Shenzhen Western Corridor under the "co-location" arrangement – land development, December 2007
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  98. Part II, First Schedule to the Shenzhen Bay Port Hong Kong Port Area Bill
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  100. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  101. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  102. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  103. a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  104. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  105. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  106. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  107. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  108. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  109. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  110. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  111. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  112. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  113. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  114. Map of Vanhasaari Template:Coord
  115. Map of Vanhasaari/Maly Pogranichny
  116. Map of Jähi Template:Coord
  117. Map of divided island southeast of Peräluoto Template:Coord
  118. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  119. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  120. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  121. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  122. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  123. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  124. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  125. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  126. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  127. Per "Thinking", 1995: "During the Revolutionary War, the British held Sandy Hook, a seven-mile finger of land in Raritan Bay that is part of Middletown even though it is not connected to the municipality."
  128. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  129. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  130. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  131. a b Say goodbye to the weirdest border dispute in the world Template:Webarchive, Washington Post, August 1, 2015.
  132. Area based on this map Template:Webarchive using Google Maps area calculator tool [1] Template:Webarchive
  133. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  134. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  135. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  136. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  137. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  138. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  139. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  140. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  141. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  142. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  143. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  144. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  145. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  146. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  147. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  148. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  149. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  150. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  151. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  152. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  153. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  154. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  155. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  156. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  157. Encyklopedia Szczecina. vol. 1, A-O. Szczecin: University of Szczecin, 1999, p. 229, 307. ISBN 83-87341-45-2.
  158. Willi Neuhoff: Erich Spiegel – 1945 erster Nachkriegsbürgermeister in Stettin. In: Stettiner Bürgerbrief. no. 24, 1998, ISSN 1619-6201, pp. 60–63. (in German)
  159. Jan Matura: Historia Polic od czasów najstarszego osadnictwa do II wojny światowej. vol. 2. Police: Urząd Gminy w Policach, 2002, p. 153–154. ISBN 83-914853-5-8.
  160. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  161. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  162. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  163. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  164. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  165. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  166. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  167. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  168. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  169. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  170. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  171. a b c d Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  172. Horwitz, Tony. Oct. 2003, Blue Latitudes: Boldly Going Where Captain Cook Has Gone Before, Bloomsbury, Template:ISBN
  173. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  174. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  175. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  176. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  177. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  178. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  179. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  180. Template:Cite map (with hand-drawn features dated 1932)
  181. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  182. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  183. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  184. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  185. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  186. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  187. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  188. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  189. J. Wyrozumski: Dzieje Polski piastowskiej (VIII w.-1370), Kraków: Fogra, 1999, ISBN 83-85719-38-5, OCLC 749221743.
  190. O. Balzer: Genealogia Piastów, Kraków, 1895.
  191. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  192. Encyklopedia Warszawy. Warsaw: Polish Scientific Publishers PWN, 1994. ISBN 83-01-08836-2.
  193. Encyklopedia Warszawy. Warsaw: Polish Scientific Publishers PWN, 1994, p. 300. ISBN 83-01-08836-2.
  194. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  195. Władysław Bartoszewski: 1859 dni Warszawy. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Znak, 2008, p 67. ISBN 978-83-240-1057-8. (in Polish)
  196. Andrzej Gawryszewski: Ludność Polski w XX wieku. Warsaw: Polska Akademia Nauk – Instytut Geografii i Przestrzennego Zagospodarowania im. Stanisława Leszczyckiego, 2005, pp. 42, 55. ISBN 83-87954-66-7. ISSN 1643-2312. (in Polish)
  197. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  198. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  199. Lech Królikowski, Bolesław Orłowski: I Warszawę nie od razu zbudowano. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo IHNOiT, 1993, p. 95. ISBN 9788390089188.
  200. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  201. Instituto Geográfico do Exército: Territory of Santa Maria (Estremoz)Template:Dead link
  202. https://sariyer.bel.tr/ckuploads/ckfiles/SARIYER%20YASAM%20REHBERI%202018-internet.pdf?time=1578562766947 Life guideline of Sarıyer
  203. https://www.mevzuat.gov.tr/MevzuatMetin/1.5.3392.pdf Law No: 3392 about for forming 103 districts
  204. https://www.resmigazete.gov.tr/eskiler/2012/12/20121206-1.htm Law No: 6360
  205. https://www.resmigazete.gov.tr/arsiv/8654.pdf Template:Bare URL PDF
  206. Jones, I.W: Llandudno, Queen of the Welsh Resorts 2008 p. 129
  207. Ordnance Survey 6 inch Denbighshire III and IV 1875, with notes
  208. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  209. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  210. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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